quick shoot it in the head!!!

That is actually 60mA not .06mA.The first photo is with all doors closed and the alarm on. It appears to be showing .06 milliamps.
That is actually 60mA not .06mA.
It might be a little decieving to you because your switch is on the mA setting. But in order to measure mA the red multimeter wire needs to be in the mA socket. Your wire is in the A socket so that reading is in amps.

If it didn't read in the mA socket then you probably blew the fuse in your multimeter. Each of those amp settings have a fuse in them to protect the multimeter. If you measure more current then they are rated for you will pop the fuse.Ah, thanks for that info!! I did try the mA socket but it didn't read at all.
But, should 60mA be killing my battery in a night?
http://powersource.optimabatteries.com/uncategorized/what-is-normal-for-a-parasitic-draw/
Not sure if that's been posted already or not but it's good info. 60mA isn't all that out of the question - especially with a 2-way alarm.
Well, the radio is pulling 2mA so there is 4 more somewhere else.
The bigger deal here is the battery should not go dead on 60mA draw over 3 days of no use. That's bull****!
2mA or 20mA? Are you doing keyless entry/remote start as well? I can't remember the exact numbers now but years ago when I put a Python 680XP with the two-way key fob on my Integra I remember seeing a pretty big jump in the key-off draw. I was running a used yellow top at the time (~1.5 yrs old) and it lasted me another 6 years with that alarm setup on top of a decent sized stereo system (no cap so the battery was taking all the amp spikes) and whatever other little gadgets happened to be plugged in.
I don't have any long-term experience with red tops but 3 days does seem a little ridiculous considering the sitting-for-months/years cold crank stories we hear about.
Ya I think that is the part a lot of people are missing. The reason your battery is going dead is the "reserve" of that battery is no longer anywhere near where it used to be. So you no longer can sustain a small current draw for any period of time. You can charge it up and it will start a car but letting it sit for any period of time will kill it. Your problems are exactly the same problems I had with my Range Rover after about 1.5-2 years with an optima.Probably the single worst part in all this is I had a 2 year old diehard that was working fine in the suburban in it's current form. IE alarm, stereo system and all else. Figured I'd "upgrade" to $200 Optima battery. dumb, just dumb!

My guess would be that there is something in the design that causes them to sulfate much quicker then standard batteries. I have no imperical evidence to support that claim. Just that, that is what I suspect happens and why people who let their cars sit experience the problem more then others.why is that optimas are the only battery that suffers from this tiny draw which is to blame for their batterys totally sucking fat nuts. one way to fix the tiny draw that kills your optima battery......buy a INTERSTATE
Tim, I'm glad to see you were able to get your draw measurements straightened out, as your previous numbers sounded way too low for your application. If I recall from what you posted earlier in this thread, you indicated you recently received a warranty replacement of a Group D34/78 YellowTop, correct? Our Group D34/78 YellowTop has a capacity rating of 55 amps when fully-charged. A 60-milliamp draw means a vehicle is discharging that battery at a rate of 1.44 amps (.060 x 24 hours) per day. This means the battery will be dead (0% state of charge) in just over 38 days (55/1.44) without any charge going to the battery. These calculations assume the battery is fully-charged when it is parked (most are not) and does not take into consideration climate, which can shorten (heat) or lengthen (moderate temps) these timeframes.
As Chris pointed out, when I measured the draw on my Excursion, it also measured 60 milliamps. However, Ford felt it was a good idea to install dual batteries in their diesel Excursions, so the combined capacity of my dual RedTops is 100 amps when fully-charged. Using those same calculations, it would take my truck more than two months to discharge my batteries. My truck also has more than 200,000 miles on it and gets driven nearly every day. My wiring is also entirely stock and the only non-factory electrical accessories I have are a GPS, cell phone charger and iTrip, which are all plugged in through cigarette lighters when needed.
It sounds as if you have been charging your YellowTop to 13.43 volts each day, so you're obviously fully-charging it. What has the voltage typically been when you find it discharged the following day? What happened when you fully-recharged your battery and left it disconnected from your vehicle?
Jim McIlvaine
eCare Manager, OPTIMA Batteries, Inc.
www.facebook.com/optimabatteries
I do not know what the voltage was when dead and I've not done the charge and disconnect test yet.