The Maine Medical Examiner’s Office has ruled the stabbing death of a 30-year-old Bangor man a homicide.
Bangor police say they responded to a report of a disturbance in a Bangor parking lot Tuesday evening, where they found Thomas Neil Taylor suffering from stab wounds to the chest.
Taylor was taken to Eastern Maine Medical Center where he later died.
Still looking for a suspect…but certainly not a “Gun Death”.
Christopher Knight went into the central Maine wilderness 27 years ago.
Maine Warden Service Sgt. Terry Hughes and Maine State Police Trooper Diane Perkins-Vance discuss Christopher Knight’s habits and life in the woods of Rome.
He built a hut on a slope in the woods, where he spent his days reading books and meditating.
There he lived, re-entering civilization only to steal supplies from camps under the cover of darkness. During those nearly three decades, he spoke just once to another person – until he was arrested during a burglary last week.
In between, Knight told police, he committed more than 1,000 burglaries, always taking only what he needed to survive. He became so familiar for his thievery and elusiveness that he spawned the local legend of the North Pond Hermit, who for years confounded both locals and police investigating the break-ins.
Sounds interesting, but what’s really neat is HOW he did it. I’d say “Hut” wasn’t the proper term for his shelter:
Knight went to great lengths to make the camp invisible from the ground and the air, even covering a yellow shovel with a black bag. Knight never had a fire, even on the coldest days, for fear of being detected. He covered shiny surfaces, like his metal trash cans, with moss and dirt and painted green a clear plastic sheet over his tent.
Knight even situated his campsite facing east and west to make the best use of the sun throughout the day….Knight often made the trip at night, carrying stolen supplies, using only a pen light.
He draped dark tarps over rope strung between trees, and tarps underneath, to give added protection from rain. One of those ropes has been in place so long that it has grown deep into the tree.
Inside the tent on Tuesday, there was a bed, somehow raised off the ground, surrounded by Rubbermaid totes that he used as nightstands to hold his radio and other supplies.
Outside he had fashioned an antenna to the top of the tree, about 30 feet in the air, with a cable running into his tent. Knight told police he listened to talk radio, such as Rush Limbaugh, and WBLM. For a short time Knight even had a TV but he found it drained his batteries too quickly.
Knight cooked with a pair of propane stoves. A large stockpile of empty tanks was stashed in the makeshift dump he created near his tent.
The campsite is neat and orderly — remarkably civilized for someone who tried so desperately to avoid civilization. Knight even set up mouse traps inside his tents to keep the critters from eating his food.
Knight stole all the food he ate, including meat and other perishables. Wardens were unsure what he did to preserve those items.
“He doesn’t hunt,” Hughes said. “He tried fishing a few times but it was too much work.”
Beer caps and batteries of all sizes dot the ground outside the tent. There also were a number of larger boat batteries and some the Pine Tree Camp had used to power their electric four-wheelers.
Nearby Knight had stashed under a rock a pair of leather boots, weathered badly from exposure.
Clothes hung for drying on rope stretched between trees immediately outside the tent. Nearby, Knight had erected a makeshift shower well hidden behind a small growth of fir trees.
There were no permanent structures — nothing was nailed down. The dirt was worn in the area, but otherwise there were no permanent reminders of a life lived in the space.
Knight said he spent his days at camp reading and meditating.
“I asked him, ‘What kind of books do you read?'” Hughes said. “He said, ‘Whatever I can steal.'”
And by far the most strange and interesting bit was this part:
Hughes showed Knight a copy of that photo, which showed Knight’s face clearly. She asked him if he could identify the man pictured in the photo. Knight studied the photo for some time, but was unable to identify himself, Perkins-Vance said.
Knight, who shaves without a mirror, said he has caught only glimpses of his reflection in pools of water.
“He hasn’t seen himself in the mirror for well over 20 years,” Hughes said. “It’s a very unusual situation.”
He hasn’t seen a clear image of himself since he was in high school, so he didn’t even recognize the old balding man he’s become.
So 27 years in the Maine wilderness without human contact and without a permanent structure or even a campfire. Makes Henry David Thoreau look like a piker!
Also it appears he’s making no resistance to law enforcement about the crimes he’s committed, he freely admits everything he has (except the eyeglasses he wore in high school) is stolen. Strange and amazing case.
You may best know the guinea pig as a nervous little pet that lives in a cage and eats alfalfa pellets.
Now, the rodents are increasingly showing up on plates in the United States.
South American restaurants on both coasts seem to be pushing the trend, answering to demand mostly from Andean expats for what is considered a fine and valuable food in Ecuador, Peru and Colombia. Middle-class foodies with a taste for exotic delicacies are also ordering, photographing and blogging about guinea pig. The animals — called cuyes in Spanish — are usually cooked whole, often grilled, sometimes deep fried. Many diners eat every last morsel, literally from head to toe.
Guinea pigs on the grill
But there may be more to gain from eating guinea pig than bizarre foods bragging rights. According to activists, eating guinea pig is good for the environment.
, an Idaho-based science writer with The Nature Conservancy, says rodents and other small livestock represent a low-impact meat alternative to carbon-costly beef. Miller, who is writing a book about the ecological benefits of eating unconventional meats, visited Colombia several years ago. At the time, he says, conservation groups were expressing concern about local ranchers clearing forest to provide pasture for their cattle — activity that was causing erosion and water pollution.
Honestly this is one of the selling points of fish farming. Most aquaculture species ten pounds of fish feed turns into nearly nine pounds of fish fillets at the end of the season, still I have to wonder about that argument, given that nothing goes to waste from a cow in this country. We eat the meat, we eat the organs, the skin gets tanned into leather, the bones into bone meal, ect. There’s a lot of products that come from a cow besides food.
Still interesting article about eating guinea pig. I’d try one…hell I’m still interested in eating some nutria!
A Worcester woman is facing charges after her 3-year-old son died in a high-speed crash Monday night, police said….orcester Fire Rescue extricated the boys from the wrecked vehicle, and they were taken to a local hospital, where Jayden died. The other child was listed in critical condition.
The 5 year-old boy and Castro were slightly injured. Officials said the three boys were not restrained in the vehicle.
“All indications point to that they were not restrained in the vehicle. There were no seat belts used,” Worcester Police Department Sgt. Kerry Hazelhurst said.
But seat belts are MANDATORY in the State of Massachusetts! Didn’t stop somebody from breaking the law, and now a child is dead.
Hey but background checks and locking up guns will save lives, right?
Also yet another “Gun Death” that won’t be counted!