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Bad days... |
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Sometimes,
it seems like some people are just plain *doomed*. If you don't believe it,
consider these weird deaths:
A
fierce gust of wind blew 45-year-old Vittorio Luise's car into a river near
Naples, Italy, in 1983. He managed to break a window, climb out and swim to
shore where a tree blew over and killed him.
Mike
Stewart, 31, of Dallas was filming a movie in 1983 on the dangers of low-level
bridges when the truck he was standing on passed under a low-level bridge
killing him.
Walter
Hallas, a 26-year-old store clerk in Leeds, England, was so afraid of dentists
that in 1979 he asked a fellow worker to try to cure his toothache by punching
him in the jaw. The punch caused Hallas to fall down, hitting his head, and he
died of a fractured skull
George
Schwartz, owner of a factory in Providence, R.I., narrowly escaped death when a
1983 blast flattened his factory except for one wall. After treatment for minor
injuries, he returned to the scene to search for files. The remaining wall then
collapsed on him, killing him.
Depressed
since he could not find a job, 42-year-old Romolo Ribolla sat in his kitchen
near Pisa, Italy, with a gun in his hand threatening to kill himself in 1981.
His wife pleaded for him not to do it, and after about an hour he burst into
tears and threw the gun to the floor. It went off and killed his wife.
In
1983, a Mrs. Carson of Lake Kushaqua, N.Y., was laid out in her coffin, presumed
dead of heart disease. As mourners watched, she suddenly sat up. Her daughter
dropped dead of fright.
A
man hit by a car in New York in 1977 got up uninjured, but lay back down in
front of the car when a bystander told him to pretend he was hurt so he could
collect insurance money. The car rolled forward and crushed him to death.
Surprised
while burgling a house in Antwerp, Belgium, a thief fled out the back door,
clambered over a nine-foot wall, dropped down and found himself in the city
prison.
In
1976 a twenty-two-year-old Irishman, Bob Finnegan, was crossing the busy Falls
Road in Belfast, when he was struck by a taxi and flung over its roof. The taxi
drove away and, as Finnegan lay stunned in the , another car ran into him,
rolling him into the gutter. It too drove on. As a knot of gawkers gathered to
examine the magnetic Irishman, a delivery van plowed through the crowd, leaving
in its wake three injured bystanders and an even more battered Bob Finnegan.
When a fourth vehicle came along, the crowd wisely scattered and only one person
was hit-Bob Finnegan. In the space of two minutes Finnegan suffered a fractured
skull, broken pelvis, broken leg, and other assorted injuries. Hospital
officials said he would recover.
Two
West German motorists had an all-too-literal head-on collision in heavy fog near
the small town of Guetersloh. Each was guiding his car at a snail's pace near
the center of the road. At the moment of impact their heads were both out of the
windows when they smacked together. Both men were hospitalized with severe head
injuries. Their cars weren't scratched.
Hitting on the novel idea that he could end his wife's incessant nagging by giving her a good scare, Hungarian Jake Fen built an elaborate harness to make it look as if he had hanged himself. When his wife came home and saw him she fainted. Hearing a disturbance a neighbor came over and, finding what she thought were two corpses, seized the opportunity to loot the place. As she was leaving the room, her arms laden, the outraged and suspended Mr. Fen kicked her stoutly in the backside. This so surprised the lady that she dropped dead of a heart attack. Happily, Mr. Fen was acquitted of manslaughter and he and his wife were reconciled.
More
True Life Stories
Darwin
Awards are (by definition) granted posthumously. This citation is bestowed upon
(the remains of) that individual, who through single-minded self-sacrifice, has
done the most to remove undesirable elements from the human gene pool.
[San
Jose Mercury News] An unidentified man, using a shotgun like a club to break a
former girlfriend's windshield, accidentally shot himself to death when the gun
discharged, blowing a hole in his gut.
[Hickory
Daily Record 12/21/92] Ken Charles Barger, 47, accidentally shot himself to
death in December in Newton, N.C., when, awakening to the sound of a ringing
telephone beside his bed, he reached for the phone but grabbed instead a Smith
&Wesson;.38 Special, which discharged when he drew it to his ear.
[Unknown,
25 March] A terrible diet and room with no ventilation are being blamed for the
death of a man who was killed by his own gas. There was no mark on his body but
autopsy showed large amounts of methane gas in his system. His diet had
consisted primarily of beans and cabbage (and a couple of other things). It was
just the right combination of foods. It appears that the man died in his sleep
from breathing from the poisonous cloud that was hanging over his bed. Had he
been outside or had his windows been opened, it wouldn't have been fatal. But
the man was shut up in his near airtight bedroom. He was ". . . a big man
with a huge capacity for creating [this deadly gas]." Three of the rescuers
got sick and one was hospitalized.
[Reuters,
Mississauga, Ontario] Man slips, falls 23 stories to his death. A man cleaning a
bird feeder on his balcony of his condominium apartment in this Toronto suburb
slipped and fell 23 stories to his death, police said Monday. Stefan Macko, 55,
was standing on a wheeled chair Sunday when the accident occurred, said
Inspector D'Arcy Honer of the Peel regional police." It appears the chair moved
and he went over the balcony," Honer said." It's one of those freak
accidents. No foul play is suspected."
[UPI,
Toronto] Police said a lawyer demonstrating the safety of windows in a downtown
Toronto skyscraper crashed through a pane with his shoulder and plunged 24
floors to his death. A police spokesman said Garry Hoy, 39, fell into the
courtyard of the Toronto Dominion Bank Tower early Friday evening as he was
explaining the strength of the building's windows to visiting law students. Hoy
previously had conducted demonstrations of window strength according to police
reports. Peter Lauwers, managing partner of the firm Holden Day Wilson, told the
Toronto Sun newspaper that Hoy was"one of the best and brightest"
members of the 200-man association.
[AP,
Cairo, Egypt, 31 Aug 1995 CAIRO, Egypt (AP)] Six people drowned Monday while
trying to rescue a chicken that had fallen into a well in southern Egypt. An
18-year-old farmer was the first to descend into the 60-foot well. He drowned,
apparently after an undercurrent in the water pulled him down, police said. His
sister and two brothers, none of whom could swim well, went in one by one to
help him, but also drowned. Two elderly farmers then came to help, but they
apparently were pulled by the same undercurrent. The bodies of the six were
later pulled out of the well in the village of Nazlat Imara, 240 miles south of Cairo. The
chicken was also pulled out. It survived.
James
Burns, 34, of Alamo, Mich., was killed in March as he was trying to repair what
police described as a "farm-type truck." Burns got a friend to drive
the truck on a highway while Burns hung underneath so that he could ascertain
the source of a troubling noise. Burns' clothes caught on something, however,
and the other man found Burns "wrapped in the drive shaft."
[Kalamazoo
Gazette, 4-1-95] Same thing up here in MI. Seems some poor fella thought it
would be a good idea to "move" a downed wire from his car. Newspaper
reports it took a FULL MINUTE of neighbors whacking away at him with a 2x4 to
free their freshly fried former friend from the fatal flashing.
Bowling
Green, Ohio, student Robert Ricketts, 19, had his head bloodied when he was
struck by a Conrail train. He told police he was trying to see how close to the
moving train he could place his head without getting hit.
In
Wesley Chapel, Florida, Joseph Aaron, 20, was hit in the leg with pieces of the
bullet he fired at the exhaust pipe of his car. When repairing the car, he
needed to bore a hole in the pipe. When he couldn't find a drill, he tried to
shoot a hole in it.
[Times
of London] A thief who sneaked into a hospital was scarred for life when he
tried to get a suntan. After evading security staff at Odstock Hospital in
Salisbury, Wiltshire, and helping himself to doctor's paging devices, the thief
spotted a vertical sunbed. He walked into the unit and removed his clothes for a
45-minute tan. However, the high-voltage UV machine at the hospital, which is
renowned for its treatment of burns victims, has a maximum dosage of 10seconds.
After lying on the bed for almost 300 times the recommended maximum time, the
man was covered in blisters. Hours later, when the pain of the burns became
unbearable, he went to Southampton General Hospital, 20 miles away, in
Hampshire. Staff became suspicious because he was wearing a doctor's coat. After
tending his wounds they called the police. Southampton police said: "This
man broke into Odstock and decided he fancied a quick suntan. Doctors say he is
going to be scarred for life.
"More
intelligence-challenged people"
45
year-old Amy Brasher was arrested in San Antonio, Texas, after a mechanic
reported to police that 18 packages of marijuana were packed in the engine
compartment of the car which she had brought to the mechanic for an oil change.
According to police, Brasher later said that she didn't realize that the
mechanic would have to raise the hood to change the oil.
Portsmouth,
R.I.Police charged Gregory Rosa, 25, with a string of vending machine robberies
in January when he
1.
fled from police inexplicably when they spotted him loitering around a
vending machine and
2.
later tried to post his $400 bail in coins.
Karen
Lee Joachimi, 20, was arrested in Lake City, Florida, for robbery of a Howard
Johnson's motel. She was armed with only an electric chainsaw, which was not
plugged in.
The
Ann Arbor News crime column reported that a man walked into Burger King in
Ypsilanti, Michigan at 7:50 am, flashed a gun and demanded cash. The clerk
turned him down because he said he couldn't open the cash register without a
food order. When the man ordered onion rings, the clerk said they weren't
available for breakfast. The man, frustrated, walked away.