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The Disappearance Of QB Cullen Finnerty


SoFlaJets

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It is believed that he was stalked and killed by two Sasquatch in the Michigan woods. Listen to author and ex police detective David Paulides tell about the strange case and how his body tracked by his cell phone's pinging was taken away for miles in mere minutes. The more I study this subject the more I realize how I never want to encounter one. These creature ARE reeal, and also very VERY deadly dangerous.

 

https://www.facebook.com/BigfootHotspotRadio/videos/500812773354669/

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David Paulides We always get these type of replies from people who haven't read the book and think they can do a better job of deciphering the clues from our team. Mr. Dranginis, please read the books if you want answers. I will spoon feed you this, Page 139, Missing 411- The Devil's in the Detail, Kent County pathologist Dr. Stephen Cohle did the first autopsy, "There are no obvious signs of death, either through toxicology or by autopsy." Later on the same page, "A Boston University medical team stated "a definitive cause of death could not be determined." Sir, read the article carefully, vomiting led to pneumonia, they think, they are not sure. There's allot of words in the reports like "may have become", "I'm trying to put together.", etc. This is one the most inconclusive autopsy report reports imaginable. The reports lead one to believe that Finnerty was in good health when he went out to fish and then suddenly got pneumonia.The title of the following article will help you understand: CULLEN FINNERTY'S DEATH, PATHOLOGIST TRIES TO CONNECT THE DOTS, BUT CAUSE REMAINS UNCLEAR....http://www.mlive.com/.../cullen_finnertys_cause_of_deat.html

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It is believed that he was stalked and killed by two Sasquatch in the Michigan woods. Listen to author and ex police detective David Paulides tell about the strange case and how his body tracked by his cell phone's pinging was taken away for miles in mere minutes. The more I study this subject the more I realize how I never want to encounter one. These creature ARE reeal, and also very VERY deadly dangerous.

 

https://www.facebook.com/BigfootHotspotRadio/videos/5008127733546

Impossible.  JoeC and I are never been to Michigan together. 

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Sorry but SoFla's story 10X cooler, Larz loses by default. Bigfoot FTW.

 

if you google any cryptozoology story with the word hoax at the end, 99% of them are already well debunked

 

I have a few bigfoot books laying around from when I was a kid

 

this particular story just isn't compelling

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if you google any cryptozoology story with the word hoax at the end, 99% of them are already well debunked

 

I have a few bigfoot books laying around from when I was a kid

 

this particular story just isn't compelling

 

It's real you ****er I was there. I mean I was't "there" but I've heard things. 

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if you google any cryptozoology story with the word hoax at the end, 99% of them are already well debunked

 

I have a few bigfoot books laying around from when I was a kid

 

this particular story just isn't compelling

 

I used to read that stuff when I was a kid.  One night I came home late and my Dad had gotten this big paperback about Jack the Ripper.  I am a fast reader and got to the middle where the pictures were.  I figured hey, it's 1895 it will be pictures of the locations and the types of weapons, maybe the letter.  Nope.  Full on crime scene photos of the dismembered women.  I finished the whole thing that night.  It was before the internet and I was not used to seeing that kind of stuff.

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I used to read that stuff when I was a kid.  One night I came home late and my Dad had gotten this big paperback about Jack the Ripper.  I am a fast reader and got to the middle where the pictures were.  I figured hey, it's 1895 it will be pictures of the locations and the types of weapons, maybe the letter.  Nope.  Full on crime scene photos of the dismembered women.  I finished the whole thing that night.  It was before the internet and I was not used to seeing that kind of stuff.

was it this one?? I highly recommend to anybody who likes crime novels.

220px-PortraitOfAKiller.jpg

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was it this one?? I highly recommend to anybody who likes crime novels.

220px-PortraitOfAKiller.jpg

 

 

Haha.  Nah, I am old.  I read that thing when it came out way later.  Most of them just have some weird conclusion and write the book to support it.  I am pretty sure it was Rumbelow, but it may have been Sugden.

 

 897950.jpg      janus_sugden.jpg

 

Whichever one I read freaked me out so much that I ended up reading everything and even went on a highly recommended and weird Ripper walking tour when I was in London.

 

EDIT: It was Rumbelow.  I am old, but it was already an old book when I read it.  It was this one:  il_214x170.649470203_jz9f.jpg

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I used to read that stuff when I was a kid.  One night I came home late and my Dad had gotten this big paperback about Jack the Ripper.  I am a fast reader and got to the middle where the pictures were.  I figured hey, it's 1895 it will be pictures of the locations and the types of weapons, maybe the letter.  Nope.  Full on crime scene photos of the dismembered women.  I finished the whole thing that night.  It was before the internet and I was not used to seeing that kind of stuff.

 

wow.  that is something you don't forget !

 

there are some really compelling squatch cases, hair samples, audio recordings, I am open to it.  it could just be a descendant of gigantopithicus or I am even open to the idea of a descendant of neandertal

 

"eaters of the dead" is a great book.  movie sucked but the book was great

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  • 2 weeks later...

Cullen Finnerty autopsy updated
8/8/2013 - College Football  Associated Press

    LANSING, Mich. -- A former college football star who disappeared in the Michigan wilderness during a fishing trip died of pneumonia caused by inhaling his vomit after he became disoriented, possibly because of painkillers combined with having a degenerative brain disease, according to an updated autopsy released Thursday.

The report said Cullen Finnerty's anxiety and paranoia in the woods the night of May 26 may have been exacerbated by an elevated level of oxycodone and chronic traumatic encephalopathy, the brain disease that has been found in a number of ex-football players. Finnerty's brain was studied at Boston University's Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy, which said Thursday the severity of CTE was moderate and that it was highly unlikely the disease alone led to his death.
An updated autopsy revealed that former Grand Valley State QB Cullen Finnerty had CTE, the brain disease that has been found in a number of ex-football players. A study, however, says it's highly unlikely the disease alone led to his death. AP Photo/Butch Dill

"CTE possibly affected his judgment, insight and behavior, but there are other factors, including the use of medications prescribed by his doctor, that most likely contributed to the circumstances surrounding his death," the center said in a statement on behalf of the Finnerty family. "Unfortunately because of the complexity of his medications and medical status, it is impossible to determine the specific combination of factors that led to his tragic death."

Kent County Chief Medical Examiner Stephen Cohle said Finnerty, 30, became incapacitated before inhaling his vomit in Lake County 65 miles north of Grand Rapids. Though relatives reported the former Grand Valley State quarterback had a number of alcoholic drinks the day he died, Cohle said his blood-alcohol level was negligible and didn't contribute to Finnerty's incapacitation. The report said it's likely Finnerty had anxiety, disorientation and paranoia from being alone in the woods while waiting for in-laws to pick him up.

Cohle said the pain medication was prescribed to Finnerty for back injuries likely sustained during his football career. Finnerty's father, Tim Finnerty, told The Associated Press on Thursday that his son also was taking a thyroid medication at the time of his death, and the family is concerned high doses could have caused him to become sick and confused.

"None of this is going to bring Cullen back," Tim Finnerty said. "The only people that will know what happened will be Cullen and God."

An initial autopsy conducted the morning after Finnerty's body was found determined that he had a "slightly enlarged heart and slightly cloudy lungs" but "no trauma to the body at all." The final report includes toxicology results and the determination that he had CTE.

The Boston center reported in December that 34 former pro football players and nine who played only college football suffered from CTE. The NFL faces lawsuits by thousands of former players who say the league withheld information on the harmful effects of concussions. The NCAA also is being sued over its handling of head injuries.

Tim Finnerty, who coached football for 35 years, said it's important to keep researching CTE and possible links to injuries not only in football but also hockey, soccer and other sports. But he said the life lessons and benefits of playing football are substantial.

Finnerty's wife told investigators that he had a past addiction to painkillers but had not taken any drugs since spending time in a rehabilitation center more than a year earlier. Jennifer Finnerty said it wasn't the first time he had a paranoid episode. Instead of driving home from Detroit a year and a half earlier, he took off for Grand Rapids in western Michigan due to fears the FBI would follow him, she said. She said her husband remained in a state of panic for four to five days.

Cullen Finnerty, his brother-in-law Matt Brinks and father-in-law Dan Brinks went fishing the night of May 26. The Brinks dropped off Finnerty around 8:30 p.m. and watched as he boarded a personal inflatable pontoon boat and floated downstream. The plan was for the Brinks to pick up Finnerty in about 30 minutes, but as it turned out, it was the last time they would see him alive. His body was found May 28 within a mile of where he had disappeared.

In two brief phone conversations with family members, Finnerty sounded disoriented and complained of being tailed.

Finnerty led Grand Valley, a Division II school, to more than 50 victories and three Division II national titles, the last in 2006. He briefly was a member of the Baltimore Ravens and later the Denver Broncos but never took a snap in a regular-season game.

"He didn't run out of bounds. He put his head down and got the first down. He wasn't the guy that threw the ball away. He probably took some hits he shouldn't have," said Scott Boyd, a family friend who was on the search party that found the body. "But he was a leader on and off the field. He played to his fullest. ... He was always upbeat and positive and smiling and had a warm handshake and hug for you."

 

 

http://espn.go.com/college-football/story/_/id/9550462/cullen-finnerty-died-pneumonia-had-brain-disease

 

No BigFoot, at least not this time.

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Yea but bro he was being stalked ny two guys who didn't respond-they were squatches. The sat reports showed how they dragged his body around for miles and miles. I believe in these things because I have been doing a lot of research hours and hours and hours so much so that I am almost an expert now on their behavior. They are dangerous and massive and if they do target you you are dead meat-literally

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Do you have a link to the report about his body being dragged? 

 

I neither believe nor disbelieve in Bigfoot.  The only time in the last 2 Million years or so that there has been only one hominid species is the present, up to 30,000 years ago there were always two or more.  Since most Native Americans crossed over the Bering Strait 20K or more years ago, (there also seems to be a Polynesian connection whose route to North America is not clear),  it is not impossible that other hominids made the trek also.  Though there have been a lot of fraudulent sightings, that could just be hucksters grabbing onto a story, it does not necessarily mean that there are no other hominids running around the vast forests in North America.

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Do you have a link to the report about his body being dragged?

I neither believe nor disbelieve in Bigfoot. The only time in the last 2 Million years ago or so that there has been only one hominid species is the present, up to 30,000 years ago there were always two or more. Since most Native Americans crossed over the Bering Strait 20K or more years ago, (there also seems to be a Polynesian connection whose route to North America is not clear), it is not impossible that other hominids made the trek also. Though there have been a lot of fraudulent sightings, that could just be hucksters grabbing onto a story, it does not necessarily mean that there are no other hominids running around the vast forests in North America.

have you met integrity28?

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Do you have a link to the report about his body being dragged? 

 

I neither believe nor disbelieve in Bigfoot.  The only time in the last 2 Million years ago or so that there has been only one hominid species is the present, up to 30,000 years ago there were always two or more.  Since most Native Americans crossed over the Bering Strait 20K or more years ago, (there also seems to be a Polynesian connection whose route to North America is not clear),  it is not impossible that other hominids made the trek also.  Though there have been a lot of fraudulent sightings, that could just be hucksters grabbing onto a story, it does not necessarily mean that there are no other hominids running around the vast forests in North America.

KW, since you asked I have been searching now for and hour and a half and here at 54:41 I have finally found it: Now please you guys, take a couple of minutes and employ your best open mind and understand who this kid was, WHAT he was, do some research about the work that the author David Paulides is and what he was in a previous incarnation before this work he has embarked upon, Listen here: https://youtu.be/NfVs3Q1faRQ?t=54m39s

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