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Case Number: 00107 Date: April 17th 1989

Reporting Officer: Turpin, Harold

On March 23rd 1989, at around 0340, we received correspondence from an Untericht, WI resident
regarding her kidnapping and torture. Her identity has been withheld in this report. After arriving at
Armack, she was seen at 0310 by local teens, Andrew Wilcock and Hunter Kingsford, out on a late-night
joyride, possible DUI. The teens were let off, considering circumstance. After the police were notified,
the victim was delivered to the Armack Police Department in bloodied and torn clothes bearing injuries
suggesting mutilation performed on her by other parties. While it was difficult to coax answers from her,
she eventually told APD that she had been held in a large farmhouse (we determined that location to be
35 Sellicker Rd, Cassabie Falls, MN) by a group of approximately seven to twelve. Alledgedly, she had
been drugged on her way through Cassabie Falls by car. We later discovered her vehicle (Nissan
Maxima, 1999, matte light blue) parked in front of one of the captors’ homes (197 Magnable Dr,
Cassabie Falls, MN). While she has no memory of ever stopping at the house, evidence points to her
having likely been lured by the family to dinner, where she was drugged and then taken to the
farmhouse. Medical staff noted that while most of her injuries are recent, most of the blood that was on
her had dried long before the wounds were made, leading officers to believe that there may have been
other victims. Bearing signs of clear trauma, staff found it difficult to calm the victim, and without
knowledge of which drug was used, it would have been inadvisable to use tranquilizers. Between bouts
of violent and aggressive behavior, her speech was panicked and disorganized. She had also expressed
sentiments ranging from wanting to stay awake, wanting to escape from APD, and wanting to commit
suicide.

There seems to be some relation between her psychosis and her wounds specifically. The symbols
carved on the victim bear a geometric design. Artist’s (Officer Ferguson, Oliver) rendition of the injuries
along with the symbols is attached. There is no clear, discernable language from any of the inscriptions,
nor is there any derivable pictographic sense. It is currently believed that the carvings have links to some
form of fanaticism, though there seems to be no rational way to understand them.

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