Cattle mutilation is the killing and mutilation of cattle under supposedly unusual, usually bloodless circumstances. This phenomenon has been observed among wild animals as well. Worldwide, sheep, horses, goats, pigs, rabbits, cats, dogs, bison, moose, deer and elk have been reported mutilated with similar bloodless excisions; often an ear, eyeball, jaw flesh, tongue, lymph nodes, genitals and rectum are removed.
Photograph of Snippy after death showing reportedly-"clean" cuts.
Blowflies have been implicated as possible scavengers involved in making livestock carcasses look "mutilated."
The "chupacabra", literally 'goat-sucker', rose to prominence in the folklore of the mid-1990s
Mutilation or maiming is severe damage to the body that has a subsequent utterly ruinous effect on an individual's quality of life.
Police surgeon's drawing showing the mutilated body of Catherine Eddowes, Jack the Ripper's fourth canonical victim, as discovered on September 30, 1888.
Fredegund ordering the mutilation of Olericus