Size | Seeds | Peers | Completed |
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799.02 MiB | 0 | 0 | 53 |
Dave Paulides holds two degrees from the University of San Francisco, and has a professional background that includes twenty years in law enforcement and senior executive positions in the technology sector. A boyhood camping experience with his father in the late 1960s sparked his interest in Bigfoot. In 2004 he was one of the founders of North America Bigfoot Search where his investigative and analytical experiences were invaluable in researching Bigfoot sightings. He spent two years living among the Hoopa tribal members, listening to and recording their Bigfoot stories. The Hoopa Project is his first book, based upon his experiences in the Bluff Creek area of Northern California.
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Several years ago, when David Paulides, a writer/investigator, was working on something completely different in a national park, a national park ranger approached Paulides with a strange story.
The park ranger told Paulides that in his 30 years of service within the National Park Service, he had been privy to many searches for numerous missing persons, and some aspects of each and every search had left him troubled.
What the park ranger said was subsequently investigated for over six years by Paulides and compiled into four different Missing 411 books.
The pattern of the searches for the missing persons went as follows according to the park ranger: each time there was an intense week-long search accompanied by a media blitz. When the week was up, the search was called off and ended without another word. No records were kept of the searches by the Park Service or the federal government.
And it didn’t end there.
Paulides detailed in his Missing 411 books how there were other strange coincidences and through-lines of continuity from case to case. Strange weather patterns seem to accompany every single disappearance. On several of the missing persons cases, Green Berets were brought in to commence the search, even though military officials maintain that Green Berets would never be used in a civilian search on U.S. soil. When some people go missing, and are then found again, they always have a medical or psychological condition which affects their ability to speak or communicate where they’d disappeared to.
Dave Paulides’ six-year search to find out what happened to over 1,400 children and adults in the national parks of the United States, led to four volumes of Missing 411 books. Now his son, Ben Paulides, is putting together a documentary to tell the story of Missing 411.
You can support their effort to create a documentary about this here: https://hidemyass.com/?aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cua2lja3N0YXJ0ZXIuY29tL3Byb2plY3RzL...