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Authorities in Russia arrested a man earlier this month after finding human skulls, skin, and other body parts in his posession. Police also arrested the man’s wife, who allegedly participated in the crimes with her husband. Metro reports that Dmitry Bakshaev, 35, reportedly began killing people, storing their body parts, and eating them at some point in 1999. Detectives searched the suspect’s south Russia military aviation school dormitory, and found human remains stored in a freezer and refrigerator. Along with seven packages of frozen human remains, authorities reportedly found human skin and skulls, and a bucket of body parts. According to CNN, a cellphone dropped on a street in Krasnodar was filled with incriminating “selfie” photos of the male suspect with a deceased woman. RT reports that construction worker Roman Khomyakov found the phone and took it to authorities.
Dmitry Bakshaev, 35, reportedly began killing people, storing their body parts, and eating them at some point in 1999.
originally posted by: MichiganSwampBuck
Dmitry Bakshaev, 35, reportedly began killing people, storing their body parts, and eating them at some point in 1999.
That would mean that he was born in 1982 and was 17 years old when he started eating long pork. That would also mean he was born the year I graduated H.S, damn that was 35 years ago!
originally posted by: AugustusMasonicus
a reply to: dashen
Stop judging people.
originally posted by: hopenotfeariswhatweneed
originally posted by: MichiganSwampBuck
Dmitry Bakshaev, 35, reportedly began killing people, storing their body parts, and eating them at some point in 1999.
That would mean that he was born in 1982 and was 17 years old when he started eating long pork. That would also mean he was born the year I graduated H.S, damn that was 35 years ago!
Long pork?
I take it that comes from first responder accounts. I know a guy who described the smell of charred bodies as very similar to pork so he could not eat it.
It just so happens that, despite our differences, many of the pig’s biological systems are very similar to our own.
“They have a number of anatomic and physiologic similarities to humans in different systems,” Dr. Michael Swindle, retired veterinary researcher and author of “Swine in the Laboratory,” said in an interview. “They are what’s known as a translational research model, so if [something] works in the pig, then it has a high possibility of working in the human.”
According to Swindle, many of the pig’s organ systems are 80 to 90 percent similar to the corresponding systems in humans – both in anatomy and function. The system that matches up best may be the cardiovascular system, as a pig’s heart is about the same size and shape as a human heart. Pigs develop atherosclerosis – artery plaque buildup – in the same way that humans do, and they react similarly to myocardial infarction, the classic heart attack.
Because of these similarities, scientists have long used pigs to test interventional catheter devices and methods of cardiovascular surgery, as well as to understand how the heart works in general. And tissues derived from pig hearts have been used to replace defective heart valves in humans, lasting upwards of 15 years in the human body.
Be wary of any man who keeps a pig farm ...