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Vampire Killing Kits
(Found at About.com)

Some sucker buys ‘vampire killing kit’ for $12,000 US at Sotheby’s auction

Thu, October 30, 2003

This Vampire Killing Kit complete with a wooden stake and 10 silver bullets sold for $12,000 as part of Sotheby’s sale of 19th century furniture and decorative works of art in New York. (AP/HO)

NEW YORK (AP) – Just in time for Halloween, a vampire-killing kit complete with a wooden stake and 10 silver bullets sold for $12,000 US at auction Thursday.

The kit, a walnut box that also contained a crucifix, a pistol, a rosary and vessels for garlic powder and various serums, was bought by an anonymous phone bidder.

According to Sotheby’s, some experts believe that such kits were commonly available to travellers in Eastern Europe in the 18th and 19th centuries, while others think the kits were made in the early 20th century, possibly to cash in on interest in vampires sparked by the 1897 publication of Bram Stoker’s Dracula.

Elaine Whitmire, head of 19th century furniture for Sotheby’s, said she believes the kit was assembled in the early 20th century and sold to travellers as a souvenir.

“My opinion is this is a memento that you bought while you were in Europe,” she said. “I doubt it was cheap to buy.”

A label on the kit says: “This box contains the items considered necessary for persons who travel into certain little known countries of Eastern Europe where the populace are plagued with a particular manifestation of evil known as Vampires.”

The vampire killing kit was part of Sotheby’s sale of 19th century furniture and decorative works of art.

The auction house did not identify the seller of the kit. The price includes Sotheby’s auction house’s commission.

16
Oct

Vampire tells court he drank blood with friends

   Posted by: Mistress Ariana   in Vampires in the News

Date: Thu, 16 Oct 2003 12:30:22 -0000

‘Vampire’ tells court he drank blood with friends

By Stewart Payne
(Filed: 15/10/2003)

A man claiming to be a reincarnated vampire took to the witness box at his trial yesterday to deny the religious harassment of a vicar and explain why he drinks blood.

Ben Lewis, 25, who took the affirmation rather than swear on the Bible at the start of his evidence, admitted that he had become interested in vampires at the age of 12. He denied he was a Satanist and said he “identified with the Lord Jesus Christ” because, like Him, he was an outcast.

Alexia Durran, his counsel, asked: “The court has heard that you are a reincarnated vampire. Is that true?” Lewis, a hotel porter, said: “Yes.”

Asked to explain what that meant in practice, he said: “I don’t mean all that silly film stuff about crosses and garlic.” He was more of a “psychic vampire” who “absorbed energy from other people”. With his friends, all of whom dressed as Goths, in black or crimson clothing, he had experimented in bloodletting and blood drinking. He wanted to see if it gave him strength, he said.

His attempts at explaining his “faith” often left his counsel confused as she probed what he called his “vampirism”. She asked: “So that the jury may understand, what are your religious beliefs?”.

Lewis said he had become interested in spiritualism. He told the jury at Southampton Crown Court, Hants, that he listened to loud, sinister and aggressive music from bands such as Slipknot and Cradle of Filth.

Judge John Boggis, QC, who had leaned forward to follow the evidence, said: “I had better write that down,” prompting Ms Durran to say: “Your honor may find himself in the papers tomorrow.”

There was more laughter when Lewis was asked if he slept in churchyards and rose from graves at night, as he had indicated in writings found at his home.

“No, I sleep in a bed,” he replied.

He was asked to explain diaries and papers seized by police at his home at Totton, near Southampton. In one he had written that he felt an outcast because he was different from other people and described himself as “cursed” and “a freak all because I believe myself to be a reincarnated vampire”. He had also written: “I answer to no mortal and I spit on Christian beliefs.”

He said the writings were a mixture of his own thoughts and copying from books and magazines on the subject of vampires, some of which he did not understand. He had written much of it as a young boy when he had been given a book of horror stories by his grandparents. Lewis, his life-long friend Scott Bower, 26, unemployed, and his girlfriend Natalie Gibson, 19, a student, are accused of waging a campaign of harassment against their local vicar, the Rev Chris Rowberry, 45, his wife and two children.

It is alleged that they howled outside his church, St Mary the Virgin, Eling, near Totton, posted obscene material on the church notice board, made nuisance phone calls late at night and let off fireworks outside his home. They did so, says the prosecution, because he represented the Christian faith. The alleged incidents resulted in them being jointly accused of the seldom-used offence of religiously aggravated harassment, which all three deny.

Lewis admitted that he did howl once, but had done so because it was expected of him. The trial continues.

10
Jan

Spit of vampire bat may help stroke victims

   Posted by: Mistress Ariana   in Vampires in the News

Chicago Sun-Times

January 10, 2003 Friday
NEWS SPECIAL EDITION; Pg. 4

Spit of vampire bat may help stroke victims

An experimental clot-busting drug that someday might limit damage from strokes is derived from a most unusual source– vampire bats.

The drug might lengthen the three-hour treatment window that limits the effectiveness of the only approved drug in use, according to a study published today in Stroke: Journal of the American Heart Association.

The study was done on mice, though, and drugs that work wonders in lab animals often fail in people. The drug is being tested on humans in Europe, Asia and Australia, and a U.S. study could start this year. The mice study was funded partly by a German biotechnology company that’s developing the drug. “Whether it will translate to anything that is useful for humans is a big stretch,” said Dr. Jeff Frank, a University of Chicago neurologist.

The experimental drug, DSPA, is derived from the saliva of Desmodus rotundus, one of three species of vampire bats. While most bats eat insects or fruit, vampire bats drink blood. An anti- coagulant in their saliva keeps the blood flowing. Desmodus rotundus, the most common species, prefers large mammals such as cattle. If it can’t find an animal, occasionally it will chomp on a person.

“It’s extremely painful,” said bat expert Sue Barnard of Zoo Atlanta, who has been bitten. “They take a divot out of your skin.”

DSPA is genetically related to the approved clot-busting drug TPA, but more potent. The federal Food and Drug Administration has approved TPA for use after strokes caused by clots that block the flow of blood to the brain. TPA is not approved for another type of stroke caused by a burst blood vessel.

TPA also increases the risk of internal bleeding and brain damage, though. Studies have shown that the benefits of TPA outweigh the risks only if it’s taken within three hours. In most cases, it takes longer than that for patients to go to the hospital and get tested.

The new study was designed to show whether DSPA also increases the risk of internal bleeding. Researchers from Monash University in Australia and other medical centers injected DSPA and TPA into the brains of mice. Unlike TPA, the study found, DSPA had no effect on two brain receptors that can promote brain damage.

The finding raises the possibility that DSPA can be safely given for up to nine hours after a stroke, researchers said. But Dr. Keith Siller, a New York University neurologist, said a longer treatment window wouldn’t be much benefit because stroke damage is done within three hours. “Time is the essence,” Siller said.

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