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Bodmin’s Beast Strikes Terror! The Ministry is left speechless!
The apparently mythical creature has been blamed for the horrific murder of a Ministry official. Not much proof has been found and there were no witnesses.
Sam Cornwall, who was 35-years-old and the senior investigator of the British Ministry of Agriculture, came to Bodmin Moor on February 15, 2015. He had come to carry out an investigation to find proof of the existence of the mysterious Beast of Bodmin Moor. Yesterday, his body was found at the edge of a farm. His fatal wounds were obviously due to an animal attack and apparently a very large one. It seems that the Beast has carried out this brutal killing, though not much proof has been found.
The statement of Emerson White, the farmer who Mr. Cornwall had come to question told us this: “He had come to see our farm and property and after asking me a few questions about our crops and stuff he went to look around the property. I warned him about the Beast but he seemed to not care. After 2 hours he still hadn’t come back so I went to look for him. I found his body ripped up and strewn around a tree right outside of my property. The Beast’s hair was found on his body so now the Ministry can stop denying its existence.”
When asked about the Beast of Bodmin Moor, the police gave a very brief statement. Chief Humphrey stated that “there was nothing to be worried about” and that “the Head of Agriculture himself would see to it that extra safety”.
The dreaded Beast of Bodmin Moor isn’t the only one of its kind. The Beast of Cumbria is another case of dread in the outdoors, and livestock being ripped to shreds by a large “feline” with the police getting more than two dozen calls in the past five years dealing with just the beast. Another feline predator to add to the family is the Beast of Trowbridge, who was thought to be a fake. However, two years later, there were many reported sightings of the Beast of Trowbridge. Last but not least, the Beast of Shroud was blamed for the mauling of deer in the countryside. These animals - normally black or brown - have been seen in almost every county in Britain, from Cornwall to the tip of Scotland.