US Marshals Surrounded by Pack of Bipedal Creatures in Savannah
Posted Sunday, June 21, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
There's a video floating around YouTube right now that every researcher needs to see, and honestly, it's one of the most detailed law enforcement encounter accounts I've come across in a long time. It comes from a channel called The World Behind Midnight, and the story it tells is absolutely chilling.
So here's the setup. A US Marshals task force is hunting a federal fugitive through the historic squares of Savannah, Georgia in October 2012. The fugitive had been on the run for 19 months, moved through seven states, crossed into Mexico twice, and burned three safe houses. The Marshals finally get a credible tip placing him in Chatham County, and they activate Task Force Echo at 2140 hours with four deputies to catch him before he can disappear onto a container ship at the port.
The team enters the square system on foot at 2207 hours. Almost immediately, things start feeling off. Deputy Nguyen notes the silence is wrong. No insects, no distant traffic, no wind. Just dead air. Bradley, the team commander, files it and keeps moving because the warrant can't wait.
Then they start finding physical evidence. A smear on a wrought iron fence at nine feet of elevation, consistent with something large clearing the fence from inside the garden outward. Not a dog. Not a man. Something in between, and something tall.
They find the fugitive at 2231 hours, and this is where the story takes a turn that no training manual covers. He's suspended from a branch of a massive white oak at twelve feet of elevation, positioned with a stillness and precision that no fall could explain. The bark around the anchor point is compressed inward in a pattern inconsistent with any rope or cable. The warrant is closed. The night is just beginning.
What happens next is the reason this file spent eleven years in a suppression vault. As the team tries to withdraw to their vehicles, Foster's night vision goggles start fragmenting. Every heat source in his forward arc equalizes to the same temperature. When he flips up the NVGs and looks with the naked eye, he sees amber points of light everywhere. Multiple contacts. Static. Not moving. Bradley's body camera captures bioluminescent ocular signatures distributed across at least four cardinal positions simultaneously. Somewhere between fifteen and twenty-five individual signatures, pulsing in short irregular bursts that defeat every optical targeting system the team has.
Savage sweeps his weapon light across a hedgerow and catches a full silhouette for a fraction of a second. Bipedal. Tall. Lupine skull architecture with a long muzzle, high-set triangular ears, and a sagittal ridge. Then it's gone, moving too fast to track.
Foster, who had a background in wildlife enforcement, tells Bradley something that changes everything. The vocalization they heard wasn't threat signaling. It was a command. The pack wasn't attacking. It was repositioning, cutting off the retreat route through patient geometric placement, moving through the dark corridors between parked vehicles with a silence that should have been physically impossible for organisms of that size.
In the eleven seconds that followed, one of the deputies was taken. The audio from Bradley's body camera captures Nguyen saying "Above us," Savage's light swinging vertical, a heavy impact sound, and then the sound of rapid movement. Something moving Savage. His boots scraping cobblestones in the wrong direction. Three seconds of that sound, then silence.
Bradley orders the surviving team to the nearest church, and they make it out.
Now, this account lines up with a lot of what researchers have been piecing together for decades. The coordinated pack behavior, the use of vocalizations that function as commands, the way they manipulate light and thermal signatures to defeat optical equipment, the deliberate tactical repositioning rather than direct confrontation. These aren't the behaviors of a simple animal. This is intelligence. This is culture. This is a family group operating with purpose.
The fact that this encounter involved trained federal law enforcement officers with body cameras, NVGs, and radio communications makes the account particularly compelling. These aren't folks who wandered into the woods at night hoping to see something. They were executing a warrant and got caught in something they had no framework to understand.
The channel that posted this has done something interesting with the presentation. The narration walks through the incident report structure, referencing specific sections like 7F, and treats the suppressed file as the primary source. It's worth watching the full thing because the details about how the pack used the radio net, and the specific behavioral observation that kept this classified for over a decade, are exactly the kind of granular data that researchers have been starving for.
Go find this one. It's a long watch, but it's the kind of account that reminds you why people keep going back into the woods.