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The Terrifying Truth of the Bunny Man!

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Could a guy in a bunny suit be your worst nightmare? 🎉 #tatsumaki #onepunchman #metgala2026 #redcarpet #celebrities #partneramazon #topstories Made with Vexub

Script Vidéo

The true story behind the Bunny Man incidents began in October 1970 in Fairfax County — and unlike most urban legends, it was backed by real police reports and newspaper coverage. Late one night, Air Force cadet Robert Bennett and his fiancée were parked on Guinea Road after a football game when they noticed movement behind their car. Suddenly, a man in a white bunny costume with long ears rushed from the woods screaming: “You’re on private property!” Moments later, he threw a hatchet through their car window. The couple escaped unharmed, but police recovered the hatchet from the car floor. The bizarre attack was reported in The Washington Post, and Fairfax County police opened an investigation. Ten days later, the “Bunny Man” appeared again. A construction security guard named Paul Phillips encountered a man in a gray-and-white rabbit suit standing on the porch of a new home. The figure was violently chopping at a wooden support beam with a long-handled axe. When Phillips approached, the man turned and shouted: “If you come any closer, I’ll chop off your head.” Then he disappeared into the woods before police arrived. The attacker was never identified. As the years passed, the real incidents evolved into darker stories involving escaped asylum patients, murdered teenagers, and ghosts haunting the nearby railroad overpass now known as “Bunny Man Bridge.” But historians later confirmed that no evidence of those murders or asylum escapes ever existed. The only verified events were the two terrifying 1970 encounters with a real axe-wielding man in a bunny suit.