Corridor Ramp Checks document the wider field-observation effort connected to Mutilation Watch.
While Ramp 135 near Brewer, Missouri remains the origin point of the investigation, the central question does not end at one location. If the original Brewer File incident was isolated, continued observation may eventually help show that. If another deer or other animal appears under unusual circumstances at a nearby ramp, rest area, roadside pull-off, or exit area along the I-55 Corridor, that discovery may become important to the larger record.
This section focuses on ramp checks along the I-55 Corridor from St. Louis to New Madrid, Missouri. These checks may include roadside observations, exit-ramp inspections, photographs, location notes, weather conditions, animal remains, scavenger activity, roadway evidence, nearby disturbances, and any unusual details that may help compare future discoveries against the original Brewer File incident.
Not every ramp check will produce a finding. Most may not. That is part of the investigation. A clean ramp, an unchanged location, or the absence of unusual animal activity still helps build the timeline. Over time, repeated observations may help determine whether the Brewer File remains a single documented event or whether similar incidents begin to appear elsewhere along the Corridor.
The purpose of this section is not to assume a pattern before one exists. The purpose is to watch the route carefully enough that, if a pattern does emerge, it will not be missed.
Each corridor check adds another point to the record.