When Mulder and Scully are examining the bones that are laid out on the floor, the level of the chicken pieces in the bucket Scully is holding varies between shots. In some shots it is 3/4 full, in others less that half.
While all the factory workers are wearing overalls, gloves and hats, Mulder and Scully and the two other people walking around the production areas are not required to wear protective clothing. This would never be allowed in a food factory.
Scully states that Creutzfeld-Jacob disease is not contagious. While it's true that one cannot catch the disease from an infected person's blood or saliva, one can catch it from exposure to an infected person's brain matter. In this fashion, CJD is similar to Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy, another prion disease affecting cattle. Outbreaks of BSE in cattle have led to cases in humans who consumed beef products from infected cows.
The chickens kept in the yard of Chaco's mansion is clearly a prop setup by the production.
It has no protection from the sun and there was no coop for the chickens to go inside from the rain. It was also far too small for the number of chickens shown.
It has no protection from the sun and there was no coop for the chickens to go inside from the rain. It was also far too small for the number of chickens shown.
The duct-taped Scully is played by a stunt double whose eyes are brown instead of blue.
A "foxfire" in the Arkansas town is seen by a witness driving along Interstate 10. I-10 does not run through Arkansas; the closest I-10 is to Arkansas is the Louisiana Gulf Coast.
After Doris Kearns calls Mulder and Scully at the Hall of Records from inside her house, she immediately encounters the masked man with the ax, who raises his weapon to kill her, as he did in the teaser with George Kearns. When Scully arrives at the house shortly afterward, Doris Kearns is gone, but there is no blood anywhere inside, nor any sign that a murder was just committed there.