Ft.
Apache reports spur Bigfoot hunt
The
Arizona Republic
Nov. 6, 2006 12:00 AM
WHITERIVER
- For centuries, tiny spirit people have been a part of Apache culture, haunting
the night with mischief, playing tricks in the shadows.
Now,
the White Mountain Apache Tribe has another mystical being to watch for after
dark: Bigfoot.
In
recent months, the legendary creature purportedly has been chased by police officers,
spotted by campers and caught peeking through windows of tribal residents' homes.
Investigators
even made plaster casts of what appear to be footprints and sent hair samples
from a reported Sasquatch-like creature to a state lab for testing. Reports snowballed
so much that, over the weekend, controversial Bigfoot hunter Tom Biscardi visited
the Fort Apache Reservation northeast of Globe for the second time this year to
interview witnesses and launch a mini-expedition.
During
a broadcast Saturday on the tribe's radio station, Biscardi exhorted witnesses
to come forward.
"We're
here for the white Bigfoot, the monkey-type creature with a tail, the one that
was throwing rocks at people here," Biscardi said. "I gotta tell you,
people, it's here."
By
day's end, at least a half-dozen tribal members had told of seeing a strange beast,
hearing blood-curdling screams in the night or surviving other experiences.
Several
offered to join Biscardi's Searching for Bigfoot Inc. team on mini-expeditions.
Most backed out, but 18-year-old Laramie Smith came through after explaining that
he'd heard Bigfoot noises near a place called Diamond Creek. He said he had found
a cave that might be the beast's lair.
Smith
led the team deep into piney woods, stopping under a full moon. Searchers geared
up with infrared and thermal-imaging devices. They had a Taser, a tranquilizer
gun and a net-shooting canon, just in case. At 11 p.m., the search began in earnest.
A
stinky prowler
According
to Biscardi, a former Las Vegas show producer, there are at least 3,500 Bigfoots
nationwide, a number he derived by counting up one year of reported encounters,
then subtracting suspected hoaxes and mistakes.
He
has been trying to capture a specimen for 33 years, and his team has visited nearly
every state in that quest. Biscardi claims to have seen a half-dozen Bigfoots
personally. Recently, team members reportedly chased one into a Texas swamp. Biscardi
first visited the Apache reservation in August, after a flurry of strange incidents.
The most noteworthy occurred around 2:30 a.m. Aug. 14, when Barry and Tammy Lupe
of Whiteriver called 911 to report an un-humanly large prowler peering through
their window.
In
a police report, White Mountain tribal Officer Katherine Montoya described what
happened when she responded to the call:
"It
stood approximately 6'7" tall. It appeared to be about 220 pounds or more.
It had exceptionally long arms; it did not appear to be wearing any clothes, and
just appeared black. When it turned towards me, the most obvious feature was its
eyes. The skin around his eyes was a lighter color than the rest of the face.
It appeared almost white while the rest of the suspect was black. I could smell
a distinct odor, like a stink bug. You know, when you squish a stinkbug it smells.
It never made any sounds until it crashed through the fence (while running away)."
Myth
or beast?
Beast
legends - Yeti, Yowie, the Abominable Snowman - have been recounted around the
world for centuries. Bigfoot is among the more recent figures, first described
in 1958 after giant footprints were discovered around a logging camp in Humboldt
County, Calif.
Academic
researchers today are generally skeptical. Last week, faculty at Idaho State University
complained that a colleague, anatomy Professor Jeffrey Meldrum, is embarrassing
them by promoting the Bigfoot myth.
According
to Wikipedia.org, "The majority of scientists reject the likelihood of such
a creature's existence and consider the stories of Bigfoot to be a combination
of unsubstantiated folklore and hoax."
Another
online publication, The Skeptics Dictionary, scoffs: "There are no bones,
no scat, no artifacts, no dead bodies . . . no fur, no nothing."
Stan
Lindstedt, a regents professor of biology at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff,
said new animal species are discovered only in the most remote places on Earth
and it is unfathomable that a huge subhuman creature would remain concealed over
wide sections of the country. "I put that in the category of mythology that
can certainly make our culture interesting, but has nothing to do with science."
Biscardi
shrugs off the doubters: "The scientific world does not believe. But you
know what? Who cares? We've had the experiences."
True
believers point to the number of sightings, rejecting the idea that every encounter
can be explained as a prank or misidentified wildlife. Their position has suffered
serious setbacks in the new millennium, however.
Four
years ago, the family of Ray L. Wallace, a northern California logger, announced
upon his death that he had created the first Sasquatch footprints as a prank,
wearing shoes of carved wood.
Then,
in 2004, author Greg Long published The Making of Bigfoot, a book that says the
most famous film footage was another hoax involving an ape costume made in Hollywood.
Bob Heironimus, a Pepsi bottling company employee from Washington, admitted wearing
the outfit.
'Hoodwinked'
That
dubious history has been compounded by questions about Biscardi and his Searching
for Bigfoot Inc., which elicits criticism even within the community of Sasquatch
enthusiasts.
Last
year, Biscardi declared on a national radio show that a wounded specimen had been
captured in Nevada, and subscribers who paid $59.95 to access his Web site would
see it on streaming video. Instead of film footage, however, the public got a
bizarre story that the critter, and its mate, had been abducted by a veterinarian.
Eventually, Biscardi conceded that there was no caged specimen. He insisted he
had been "hoodwinked" by associates.
Leonard
Coleman, a self-described cryptozoologist who has written two books on Bigfoot,
said Biscardi first entered the arena decades ago as an associate of Ivan Marx,
who created notoriously phony films. Biscardi has since produced documentaries
of his own.
"He
seems very much to be in this to make money," Coleman said. "He is just
shunned in this whole community. He's been a continuation of the hoax legacy of
Ivan Marx."
Biscardi
said he got victimized in Nevada by a charade, a chronic risk in the Bigfoot business.
"I refunded every damned penny," he said. "I was hoaxed. Everybody's
human."
Biscardi,
who sells memorabilia and has sought corporate sponsors, makes no apology for
trying to make money. He said he has transformed his passion into a career, and
there are payroll expenses to cover.
The
anticlimax
Back
in Apache country on Saturday, searchers splashed across Diamond Creek and climbed
a hill.
There
was no cave, no Bigfoot nest.
One
team member, noting that Sasquatches sometimes communicate by knocking sounds,
picked up a stick and began beating on a log.
Another
stood on a rock and cupped her hands to her mouth - "Whoop! Whoop! Whoop!"
- using "vocalizations" to lure the beast.
A
coyote howled in the distance. All was quiet.
Biscardi,
who had stationed himself next to a campfire back at the truck, said it was time
to move on: "If they did not respond to the whooping and tree knocking, and
there's no signs, then there's nothing here."