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April 5, 2001 - Bill Cooper
13:19
(Unlisted) Mad Cow - Exclusive
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You see, from the hour of the time, if you go to our internet site right now, williamcooper.com, you'll see it as the lead story just posted about an hour ago.
No one else has this story.
But by tomorrow, the whole world is gonna know.
The cover-up of mad cow disease in the United States is beginning to self-destruct.
Tonight, I'm gonna give you the proof.
Of what I've been telling you all along.
According to a State of Colorado Department of Natural Resources Division of Wildlife letter, transmissible spongiform encephalopathy in Europe, known as mad cow disease, is rampant, rampant, in the mule deer, white tail deer, and elk population of Colorado, Wyoming, And from Nebraska.
And we have that letter in our possession.
I'm going to read it to you, right after I give you the pertinent portions of this story that you need to know.
Beginning as of tonight, there is no longer any doubt that mad cow disease is in the United States and has been here for a long time.
The very same disease, do you know?
According to our confidential sources, Colorado State University has been experimenting with injecting animals, deer, ponghorn, and elk with this disease.
Transmissible Spongy Corp.
Now I can't prove it.
I've been doing this for over several years.
But I can tell you that the disease is rampant in Colorado, Wyoming, and Alaska.
I will do that.
We just won't get as much.
The university is located in Glacier View, northwest of Fort Collins.
For the last couple of years, Hunters have been required to cut off the heads of their deer, put a tag on them, and drop it in barrels that have been placed at intersections of highways around the mountains.
The Division of Wildlife then tests these heads of the animals, promising to notify the hunters if the meat is infected within six weeks.
If the hunter does appear from the Division of Wildlife in six weeks, they are to assume that the meat is okay.
But, ladies and gentlemen, some families who ate the meat after not calling from the Division of Wildlife after six weeks were notified after eight weeks that the meat was contaminated.
Some families who ate the meat after not following the regulations of the World Wildlife Fund
after six weeks were notified after eight weeks that the meat was contaminated.
And there's a good chance that these people may be carrying the disease in an incubation period that can't be as long
as ten years.
Thank you for watching.
When hunters send their deer to a meat processor, it is mixed with all the other carcasses.
There is no way to monitor this as the deer bodies are brought in fridge.
They cannot thaw the deer carcass for over 6 weeks before processing.
To cover up the true nature of the disease in Colorado, it has been called CWD, or Chronic Wasting Disease.
The problem has become so serious, that now the Division of Wildlife has been forced to tell the truth.
going for a public meeting on April the 7th, 2001, to ask for the public's help in reducing the deer
population by 50% in an effort to reduce spread of the disease.
Most of the state of Colorado is infected.
Portions of Wyoming and Nebraska are also.
The heaviest concentration of the disease has been found in...
Highway 287 and Interstate 45, up to Northeastern State Road.
units run north of Fort Collins between US Highway 287 and Interstate 45 up to the Washington State Line.
Units around the Red Feathers area, Nashville, Montreal, and Estes Park are also experiencing high levels of transmissible
spongiform encephalopathy.
And here's the proof, ladies and gentlemen, in case you doubt what I'm telling you.
you Remember, this is the only place where you get proof, not all of it.
We never say anything on this broadcast that we can't prove.
This is a... an official letter, signed by David E. Clarkson, one of Earth's finest engineers, one of college's greatest.
And the letter has, at the top of the letter, a vision of wildlife.
State of Colorado, Illinois's Governor, Department of Natural Resources, Division of Wildlife, and Equal Opportunity Employer, Russell George, Director, 6060 Broadway, Denver, Colorado, 80216.
80216, telephone 303-297-1100.
Area, office, 317 West Prospect, Fort Collins, Colorado, 80526.
This letter is dated March 23rd, 2000.
March 23rd.
Check out, ladies and gentlemen.
Why not?
Most of you have heard of chronic wasting disease, CWD.
Through our ongoing public information efforts and from information in the media, CWD is a locally important disease of mule deer, right-tailed deer, and elk that belongs to a group of diseases called transmissible spongiform encephalopathies.
Also called T.S.E.
Other T.S.E.s of animals include smoking in sheep and bovine spongiform encephalopathy in Europe.
Commonly called T.S.E.
or mad cow disease.
Have you ever had any doubts?
There it is.
There it is, ladies and gentlemen.
CWD is a disease local to northeast Colorado, southeastern Wyoming, and extreme southwestern Nebraska.
Federal and state health officials have found no evidence linking chronic wasting disease to any illness in humans.
But the Division of Wildlife, DOW, is very concerned about the impact of CWD to deer herd health.
CWD is thought to be spread through nose-to-nose contact and exchange of body fluids between animals.
Transmission from does to fawns during gestation is unknown.
High concentrations of deer, including deer, that are artificially fed by people appear to increase the incidence and contribute to the spawn of CWD.
Now they made a statement here that is absolutely false.
Absolutely false, ladies and gentlemen.
Crookesfield-Jacobs disease is exactly the same disease.
It is transmissible spongiform encephalopathy in humans.
And that's how they get around letting you know Now, these things, they just call them something else.
But they're all the same.
CWD is mad cow disease.
Cootsville-Jacobs disease in humans is mad cow disease.
You better wake up!
You're lucky to have obtained this.
Continuing with the letter, we are currently participating in several research projects on a national and international scale to better understand CWD.
international scale to better understand CWD.
There's your second point.
International disease known as mortality.CWD.
In the meantime, our goals are to prevent the disease from spreading to unaffected parts of the state,
as well as to slow down the infection between animals within the areas that are already positive for CWD
is the end.
The DOW is currently conducting a management experiment in a management unit 5.
This experiment is in partnership with the landowners in the hope of reducing the deer population by 50% during a 2 to 3 year period to measure if reduced densities can slow the spread of the disease.
Unit 9 is the highest level of CWD in all of the Phoenix area in Colorado.
The units around the West Phoenix area make some noise and warmth.
This new spot is experiencing high levels of CWD.
The DOW would like to meet with Glacier View landowners on April 7th, 2 p.m.
at the Glacier View headquarters and to ask the association to consider working with the DOW,
that's the Department of Wildlife, Division of Wildlife, to conduct management activities
within the grocery area.
Currently, there are no living, no live testing methods to determine if an animal has CWD.
Suspected animals are diagnosed through examination of brain tissue after the animal has expired.
Dr. Mike Miller, DOW researcher, is working on a live testing process that involves
We would like to ask the Association to allow the DOW to tranquilize a number of people in the area as part of this study.
We would like to ask the association to allow the DAO to categorize a number of animal oil as part of a study.
Also, in an effort to determine the likelihood of influence of CWD in the interior,
we would like to discuss the incidence of CWD in the deer that reside in the sub-tropical area.
We would also like to discuss the influence and use of ice in the cold deer with a glacier view
to determine the incidence of CWD in the deer that reside in the sub-tropical area.
I look forward to meeting you on April 7th, and I'm David B. Clarkson, Area Wildlife Manager, Fort
Collins, Oklahoma.
Thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen.
Absolute courtesy.
Thank you.
Next week, it is no longer...
It is no longer a question mark.
It is the truth.
The state of Wyoming and the massive doom that it is causing.
By now, the state of Wyoming is in a critical state.
The state of Wyoming is in a critical state.
State of Colorado, Wyoming, and the Massive Dune Basin Flood Waterfall Project, also known as the Dune-Covered Surrounding
Flood, has been developed since before the Great Depression.
This project is part of a series of projects that will be developed by the National Geological Survey, the National
Geological Survey, and the National Geological Survey.
In cattle.
A couple of months ago.
What's with the bulls?
They're lying.
Bulls are lying.
They are.
Bulls don't lie.
Bulls don't lie.
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