
Real Life Witches Caught On Camera Eating Animal Carcass
A nurse and environment enthusiast in Canada allegedly obtained footage of “two witches holding a carcass-eating ritual” with a camera she set up near her home.
“I don’t know what the heck was up with that,” Corinea Stanhope, 36, of Powell River, British Columbia, told Kennedy News. “It really freaked us out, because it’s not something you see every day.”
Stanhope claimed she set up the camera after discovering a deer carcass in a garden on her property to monitor any creatures that could be interested in the dead deer.
“Me and my grandpa put up a trail camera to see if we could see animals, and we got a bobcat [on camera], which was pretty cool,” she explained, adding that her 76-year-old grandfather, Bob, was shocked when he watched the footage and saw what appeared to be a scantily clad woman chomping down on the carcass at night.
“When I arrived the next day, Grandpa said he had naked people on the camera, and I said, ‘No, you didn’t.'” Bulls—.’ So he showed me,” she explained.
According to Stanhope, the alleged carcass-eaters appeared about 10 minutes after dark, looking “disheveled” and as though they were wearing wigs.
“You can’t really tell from the photos, but the hoof was brought right up to her mouth,” she explained. “I’m not sure if she was kissing it, smelling it, or eating it, but touching a decaying carcass like that makes me sick because of the amount of bacteria on there.”

“Maybe they were paying their respects, but they were naked,” she added.
Stanhope said she was “creeped out” because the incident happened only a two-minute walk from her house and she was concerned for the safety of her horses.
“I was concerned about them messing with my horses late at night,” she explained. “The horses are always frightened and frightened around that area.” At first, I believed they were making things up, so I didn’t think much of it. “Perhaps I believe them now.”
The nurse thinks that the incident was only a joke or that the participants were “on some good drugs.” After her grandfather pointed out that nothing technically unlawful had occurred, she decided against notifying the police.
After Stanhope uploaded the photographs online, social media erupted, with some believing it was a joke and others speculating that there was a satanic or other paranormal element at work.
“That’s basically a walking demon from hell,” remarked one commenter. “If you hear screaming, stay inside and get a gun; otherwise, leave it alone.”
Others speculated that the figures were “skinwalkers” or “wendigos,” two wicked supernatural spirits from Native American culture.