Tuesday, January 18, 2022

A Porcine Bestiality Death on This Day in History

 On this day in 2014, A Brazilian man, 52, identified only as J.R.N., attempted to commit bestiality with a female pig in Tapurah, Mato Grosso, but was attacked by the animals and wounded in the genitals. He died from a cardiac arrest. His arms and face were also mutilated by the animals. Initially police believed that the man was murdered and disposed of at the farm, but this was disproven as numerous pieces of evidence showed that the man drank alcohol, used a condom and was wearing only underwear. The man worked at the farm for two years.

Bestiality (Zoophilia) is a habit that is illegal in most countries, and generally frowned upon. This does not stop some from trying to commit this heinous act, often to the detriment of the victimizer. 

In 2005. Kenneth P. was being videotaped having his way with a full-size stallions at a farm near the city of Enumclaw, Washington.  During the July 2005 act he suffered a perforated colon, and later died of his injuries. The story was reported in the The Seattle Times and was one of that paper’s most read stories of 2005.

In the distant past, even the animal victim suffered as punishment for these acts as well. 

In 1468, Jean Beisse, accused of bestiality with a cow on one occasion and a goat on another, was first hanged, then burned. The animals involved were also burned. In 1539, Guillaume Garnier, charged with intercourse with a female dog (described as "sodomy"), was ordered strangled after he confessed under torture. The dog was burned, along with the trial records which were "too horrible and potentially dangerous to be permitted to exist" (Masters). In 1601, Claudine de Culam, a young girl of sixteen, was convicted of copulating with a dog. Both the girl and the dog were first hanged, and finally burned.


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