
Extremely Dark Facts And Stories July 2025
Warning: Disturbing content ahead, including stories involving murder and extreme violence.
On June 30, 2025, a 92-year-old man, Ryland Headley, was convicted of raping and murdering a woman named Louisa Dunne in Bristol, England — a crime he committed nearly 58 years earlier, in 1967. Dunne was 75 years old at the time.
For decades, the case remained unsolved until a breakthrough came over 55 years later. In 2023, investigators reviewed the cold case and discovered new forensic evidence: a DNA sample from Dunne's clothing that matched Ryland Headley, who was already in the national DNA database.
Headley had a history of sexually assaulting elderly women, with convictions from the 1970s. His palm print also matched one found on Dunne's windowsill. He was arrested and stood trial in 2025. On June 30, 2025, Headley was convicted of rape and murder, and the next day, he was sentenced to life in prison with a minimum of 20 years, effectively ensuring he will die in custody.
The creepy (albeit interesting) grave of Timothy Clark Smith, who suffered from severe taphophobia — the fear of being buried alive. Smith took extraordinary precautions before his death in 1893, including having his grave custom-built with a cement shaft leading down from a glass window at the surface directly above his face.
Inside the tomb, he arranged for a breathing tube, a bell in his hand, and reportedly a chisel or hammer — tools meant to help him alert others and potentially escape if he awoke underground, so he could be rescued. Today, the glass is heavily clouded by condensation and plant growth, limiting visibility. However, visitors in the past claimed to be able to see his skeleton. If you feel like checking it out yourself IRL, Smith's grave is in Evergreen Cemetery in New Haven, Vermont.
On July 13, 2025, a 19-year-old died after falling into an industrial meat grinder. The victim, a sanitation worker at Tina's Burritos food processing plant in Vernon, California, reportedly fell into the meat grinder during a nighttime cleaning shift. Apparently, the machine turned on while he was cleaning it, pulling him in. Coworkers said they heard his cries for help but were unable to stop the equipment in time. Emergency responders arrived quickly but pronounced him dead at the scene.
In a statement to The U.S. Sun, a Tina's Burritos spokesperson said, "He was cleaning an empty kettle that was being sanitized and prepped for the next day's production run." No foul play is suspected.
In 2014, two Dutch students, Kris Kremers and Lisanne Froon, went missing while hiking a trail near Boquete, Panama. They never returned, and after weeks of searching, their belongings — including a backpack with their phones and camera — were found near a river. Oddly, where the backpack was found, Kremers' clothing was also found, neatly folded next to the river.
Some time later, their bones and remains were discovered scattered nearby. In fact, Lisanne's boot was found with her foot still inside. It was also discovered that their phones had tried to call for help many times. What's even more disturbing is that the camera had strange nighttime photos taken in the dark jungle. You can see those photos here.
Investigators believe the two likely got lost, had an accident, and died, while many think there may have been foul play. Their exact cause of death has never been confirmed.
In 1987, a man named Kenneth Parks in Toronto, Canada, got out of bed one night and drove almost 15 miles from his home, where he killed his mother-in-law, then attempted to kill his father-in-law...all while sleepwalking.
Parks, who said he was unconscious through the whole ordeal, had entered his in-laws' home with a key he'd been given in the past. He bludgeoned his mother-in-law to death with a tire iron, then attempted to choke his father-in-law to death, who miraculously survived the attack.
In an extra surprising twist, Parks then drove straight to a police station (still covered in blood), and told the cops, 'I think I have just killed two people.' Parks would even go on to say he was fast asleep when he surrendered. A year later, he was acquitted of murder and attempted murder using a rare legal defense known as 'non-insane automatism,' supported by evidence of parasomnia (a sleep disorder).
Last month, authorities in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, discovered almost 400 corpses at a crematorium. The remains were found abandoned and piled across multiple rooms and had reportedly been there for up to two years. Grieving families had apparently been given fake ashes in place of their loved ones' remains. The crematorium's owner and an employee were arrested and charged with mishandling human remains. Officials are working to identify the deceased and notify families.
In 2024, Russ McKamey — the owner of McKamey Manor, a notorious "torturer" haunted house attraction in Tennessee that was featured in a Hulu documentary — was arrested and charged with attempted murder, rape, and domestic assault after allegedly strangling his girlfriend during multiple incidents.
McKamey Manor had already gained attention for its extreme and controversial experiences, where participants endured intense psychological and physical horror-style challenges. The arrest subsequently led to renewed scrutiny and public outcry over the attraction's practices. Charges were ultimately dropped in September 2024, and despite public backlash, McKamey Manor remains in operation.
On July 12, 2025, a man died after falling down an elevator shaft while exploring the abandoned Southwest Detroit Hospital in the Corktown neighborhood. He was with a group of people inside the five-story building, which has been vacant since 2006. Emergency responders arrived, but he was pronounced dead at the scene. Police are still investigating the incident, but they say there are no signs of foul play.
Earlier in July, a man was found dead, wrapped in a blue tarp and a blanket, in the open‑air donation area outside a Goodwill store in Pasadena, California. A store employee discovered the body among donated items near the drop‑off bins — though not inside a locked receptacle. There were no visible injuries on the man's body, but authorities suspect that drugs may have played a role in his death.
The LA County coroner has deferred the cause of death pending further examination, and the man's identity remains private pending next-of-kin notification.
In August 1978, Janet Parker, a medical photographer at the University of Birmingham, fell ill with what was eventually diagnosed as smallpox — despite the disease having been declared eradicated just a year earlier. She worked one floor above a laboratory that was still conducting research on the smallpox virus.
Investigators believe the virus somehow escaped through a poorly sealed duct or air system, leading to her accidental exposure. Despite being hospitalized and placed in isolation, Janet died on Sept. 11, 1978. Her case sparked national panic, led to mass vaccinations in Birmingham, and triggered a formal inquiry that changed how dangerous viruses are handled in labs. She remains the last known person to die from smallpox.
Back in 2012, a woman's stomach had to be removed after she'd been given a liquid nitrogen shot at a bar in Lancaster, England.
18‑year‑old Gaby Scanlon had been out celebrating her birthday at Oscar's Wine Bar and Bistro in Lancaster when she was served a nitro‑Jägermeister shot prepared with liquid nitrogen. Moments after drinking it, she experienced "agonising pain" as smoke poured from her mouth and nose, and her stomach rapidly expanded and ruptured. Doctors performed emergency surgery, removing her stomach and reconnecting her small intestine to her esophagus to save her life.
After an investigation, the bar was fined £100,000 in September 2015 for failing its duty of care — no risk assessment was carried out, and staff hadn't warned customers to wait until the nitrogen had fully evaporated.
On June 21, 2025, a hiker from Brazil, Juliana Marins, fell into a steep ravine near the summit of Mount Rinjani, an active volcano in Indonesia. Though she initially survived the 1,600-foot fall, poor weather and dangerous terrain delayed rescue efforts. Her body was found four days later, on June 24, almost 2,000 feet below the trail. An autopsy later confirmed she died from blunt force trauma.
In other terrible hiking news, just days later, on June 18, 2025, six men were hiking near Rattlesnake Falls in Northern California when three of them — Matthew Anthony, Matthew Schoenecker, and Valentino Creus — jumped into the waterfall's pool and were swept away by the strong current. Creus had begun struggling in the water, prompting the other two to leap in to help, but all three drowned.
The remote location, fast-moving water, and poor weather made search efforts difficult, and the remaining hikers had to be airlifted out for safety. Rescue divers located the victims' bodies on June 21, and they were officially identified over the next two days.
In 19th-century Paris, the city's morgue became a popular tourist attraction where people came to view dead bodies on public display. Located near Notre Dame, the morgue showed the corpses of unidentified people behind glass windows in the hopes someone might recognize them. But instead of just helping with identification, it turned into a major spectacle, sometimes drawing more visitors than the Eiffel Tower.
People lined up to stare, vendors actually started selling snacks outside, and newspapers turned the stories behind the bodies into sensational headlines. Bodies were shown until they decomposed too much, then wax figures were used. Eventually, the morgue was closed to the public in 1907 due to ethical concerns.
In February 2013, a woman in Turkey was decapitated in a go-kart crash. The victim, 24-year-old Turkish university student Tuğba Erdoğan, had reportedly been racing around a corner when her vehicle collided with a safety barrier. Apparently, her scarf or seat belt became entangled around her neck, and the force of the impact decapitated her.
Witnesses reported the belt tightened during the crash, though later investigations suggested the scarf may have also played a role by getting caught in the kart's shaft.
Some families in the UK who lost loved ones in the recent Air India plane crash were given the wrong remains.
A lawyer for about 20 of the families says DNA tests showed that some of the remains were mixed up — in one case, parts from more than one person were in the same coffin, and in another, the remains didn't match the family at all. One family even had to cancel a funeral when they found out the body wasn't their relative. Indian officials say they followed the proper steps and are now working with the UK to sort things out.
In case you didn't know the original story: On June 12, 2025, an Air India Flight carrying 242 people — 230 passengers and 12 crew members — crashed into a medical college hostel shortly after takeoff from Ahmedabad's Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport. At least 270 people were killed (including those on the flight and on the ground), making it one of India's worst aviation disasters in history. A cause is still being investigated.
Finally, in 1993, a lawyer named Garry Hoy died while trying to show off how strong the windows were in his office on the 24th floor of his office building, the Toronto-Dominion Centre. He threw himself against the glass — a stunt he had apparently done before — but this time, the glass didn't break, the entire window frame gave way, and he fell to his death.
Garry's death was ruled an accident and is remembered as one of the strangest in legal history. The law firm he worked for closed a few years later, partly due to the shock of the event.
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Business Wire
3 days ago
- Business Wire
Class Action Against FIFA and EU Football Associations on Behalf of Football Players Launched Today by 'Justice for Players', a Dutch Foundation
AMSTERDAM--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Justice for Players Foundation ('JfP'), a Dutch Foundation has today launched a class action on behalf of professional football players who have been affected by the FIFA Regulations. The claim against FIFA and several national football associations, including the KNVB, the Football Association of the Netherlands, will be filed at the District Court of Midden-Nederland. JfP intends to represent all professional footballers who are playing or who have played in clubs in the European member states and the United Kingdom and who have been adversely affected by FIFA's unlawful rules from 2002 to the present. Preliminary estimates indicate that the number of affected footballers may comprise approximately 100,000 players. This case is being brought in the Netherlands under the Dutch Act on the Settlement of Mass Damages in Collective Action (WAMCA), which allows this legal action to be launched by JfP on behalf of a large group of professional footballers. The case has been launched following the CJEU judgment in October 2024 in the case brought by football player Lassana Diarra and FIFPRO Europe/FIFPRO World against FIFA, which found that the FIFA Regulations seriously infringed EU competition law and the right to free movement of workers, making it extremely challenging for a player to terminate their employment contract without just cause. In short, the CJEU ruled that the FIFA Regulations violated two core principles of European law: free movement of workers and fair competition. By stating unequivocally that FIFA's rules were unlawful and that those rules caused all players to suffer a financial loss, the CJEU in its judgement gave the green light to a Europe-wide class action. This is a classic follow-on claim, in line with the EU Representative Action Directive, that seeks to ensure that the rule of law is upheld, that FIFA is held to account and that all players receive the compensation that is owed to them. In particular, the CJEU noted that the FIFA Regulations had the effect of restricting the free movement of workers and competition by: establishing unlawful criteria for determining the severance 'compensation' a player must pay to their former club; allowing the national federation of the former club to withhold the issuance of an International Transfer Certificate (ITC), without which a player cannot play for a new club; making the player's new club automatically jointly and severally liable for the compensation to be paid to the former club and allowing FIFA to impose disciplinary sanctions on the player and their new club. The unlawful FIFA Regulations granted FIFA complete control over how and when players leave their current football clubs and under what conditions, effectively enforcing an extremely restrictive 'no-poaching agreement'. A preliminary analysis by economists at Compass Lexecon has estimated that affected professional footballers have earned approximately 8% less over the course of their career than they would have if the FIFA Regulations had not been unlawfully restrictive. Lucia Melcherts, Chair of the Board Member of Justice for Players, said: ' All professional football players have lost a significant amount of earnings due to the unlawful FIFA Regulations. 'Justice for Players' is bringing this claim to help achieve justice for footballers and fairness. The past and even current system unduly favours FIFA who has far too much unilateral power. In any other profession, people are allowed to change jobs voluntarily. The same should be true in football, particularly as the average career span of a professional footballer according to a FIFPro study is only 8 years long.' Franco Baldini, Board Member of Justice for Players, said: ' As a former professional footballer, agent and someone who has worked in football in various managerial capacities, I have had first hand experience, in particular with the Mexes case in 2004, of how much control and power FIFA has over the players. So I am very proud to be part of the Foundation 'Justice for Players' and to be part of something that could help change the existing system and make football more inclusive and more sustainable. ' Dolf Segaar, Board Member for Justice for Players said: ' This claim against FIFA brought by 'Justice for Players' is an important and necessary next step that will allow footballers to assert their rights as EU workers and receive compensation from an organisation that for far too long has willingly ignored the rule of EU law. The CJEU ruled in a crystal-clear manner that the FIFA Rules on termination of contracts and transfer were blatant violations of EU competition law and free movement of workers. And the CJEU also made clear that such unlawful rules had caused players to suffer financial losses. Under EU law, victims of such violations are entitled to compensation for the losses they have suffered and that is an important part of what this class action is about.' Koen Rutten, Partner at Finch Dispute Resolution, said: ' For over 20 years, FIFA has enforced unlawful rules at the expense of professional footballers. Finch is supporting 'Justice for Players' so that FIFA can be held accountable and ordered to compensate footballers whose earnings have been impacted by these unfair and illegal rules. Not only are we seeking damages for footballers who have been disadvantaged by the rules that mainly benefit FIFA and the football associations, but through this legal action we are seeking changes to the FIFA Rules so that professional players can finally have greater control over their careers.' For further information please visit: Notes to Editors About Justice for Players Justice for Players was founded to advocate for the interests of professional footballers across Europe. The board comprises of three members: Lucia Melcherts, Dolf Segaar and Franco Baldini. Lucia Melcherts has been the chair of Stichting Massaschade & Consument (Foundation for Mass Damages & Consumers) since 2021. She also holds the position of Coordinating Specialist Advisor at the Dutch Ministry of Justice and Security. Dolf Segaar founded his own law firm Segaar Law in July 2021, specialising in governance and litigation, with a strong focus on sports law. Franco Baldini is a former professional footballer and agent and spent over 20 years in different senior management roles at top international clubs and organizations, including AS Roma, Real Madrid, Tottenham Hotspur and the England National Team. He currently runs his own consulting firm IC20 Ltd. About Finch Finch Dispute Resolution is an independent Dutch litigation boutique law firm, founded in 2022. With a team of around 18 specialised litigators and 5 partners based in Utrecht, the firm handles corporate, commercial, financial, and class-action disputes—domestically and internationally. About Dupont-Hissel Jean-Louis DUPONT and Martin HISSEL are specialists in European law, particularly as applied to the sports sector. Together they have defended hundreds of cases, acting on behalf of all stakeholders in the professional sports sector, before the CJEU, the European Commission, the European Court of Human Rights, national competition authorities, national courts, international (including CAS) and national arbitration tribunals, and the internal judicial bodies of national and international sports associations. In particular, they have led and co-managed cases that resulted in landmark judgements of the CJEU regarding sports governance in the EU and beyond: Bosman (1995), Meca-Medina (2006), Royal Antwerp FC (2023), European Super League (2023), Lassana Diarra (2024) and RFC Seraing (2025). About Deminor Founded in 1990, Deminor is a leading international litigation funder with offices in Brussels, London, Hamburg, New York, Hong Kong, Madrid, Milan, Stockholm and Luxembourg. Combining skill sets from 19 different nationalities and 22 languages, Deminor possesses a highly respected and diverse team of legal and financial specialists across a range of specialisms including arbitration, enforcement, intellectual property, competition, investments & tax, corporate & post-M&A.
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Yahoo
WTF Facts From This Week That Sent Me Spiraling Into The Void
Hello! I'm Crystal, and I write the That Got Dark newsletter, BuzzFeed's weekly roundup of all things creepy, macabre, and horrible AF. And if you looooove this kind of content, you should subscribe to get your weekly dopamine fix of the macabre delivered RIGHT to your inbox! Here's what the newsletter is covering this week: extremely graphic story of Japan's 'Twitter Killer.' Related: In June 2025, a serial killer in Japan named Takahiro Shiraishi, known as the "Twitter Killer," was executed by hanging — Japan's first execution since 2022. Shiraishi had been convicted of murdering and dismembering nine people (eight of them women or teenage girls) in 2020. Back in 2017, Shiraishi would use Twitter (now called X) to lure his victims to his apartment. He specifically targeted users who posted about having suicidal thoughts and would tell them that he could 'help them in their plans.' However, once his victims arrived, Shiraishi sexually assaulted, strangled, and then murdered them. He even dismembered their bodies. Later, authorities would find cooler boxes containing human heads and bones 'with the flesh scraped off.' Shiraishi went on to plead guilty to murdering the victims, saying in court that he had 'killed them to satisfy his own sexual desires.' creepy experience one of our BuzzFeed Community members had in Monticello, Mississippi — a seemingly quiet southern town. "Dated a girl from there, and aside from the inbreeding that went on, the whole town seemed 'too happy.' I can't describe it. False cheeriness, like the townspeople had something to hide. It felt very surreal. Years later, I learned it was near where they had the Valley of the Kings cult, where the leader and his son were sexually abusing minor-age members of the congregation." —Anonymous Related: The Valley of the Kings Church was a small religious group led by a man named David Earl King. He ran the group from a large compound with homes, a church, and a farm. King had total control over everything, and people who lived there — especially women and children — were often mistreated, with people describing it as cult-like. In 2001, King and his adopted son were arrested and later convicted of sexually abusing a teenage boy, who attended their church and school, and other serious crimes. King died in prison in 2017, and the "church" no longer exists. (possible) existence of a medieval torture device called a breast ripper. The breast ripper was supposedly used to punish women, especially those accused of things like cheating or having an abortion. It had sharp claws, sometimes heated, that would be clamped onto a woman's breast and then pulled or twisted — just as the name implies. Apparently, there were even versions that attached to a wall where the woman would be pulled away from it instead. Now, there's not a ton of proof that this device was really ever used, but if it was…yikes. Related: violent and shocking murder of actor Sharon Tate (and her unborn child), along with four others on Aug. 9, 1969. On the night of Aug. 8–9, 1969, Sharon Tate, who was eight and a half months pregnant, was killed by members of the Manson Family cult at her Los Angeles home. Under the direction of Charles Manson, four of his followers — Tex Watson, Susan Atkins, Patricia Krenwinkel, and Linda Kasabian (who served as a lookout) — broke into Tate's home and killed her along with four others: Jay Sebring, Abigail Folger, Wojciech Frykowski, and Steven Parent. The murders were carried out in a frenzy of extreme violence, with the victims being either shot, stabbed (multiple times), or even bludgeoned to death. Tate, who was brutally stabbed and strangled to death, reportedly pleaded for the life of her unborn child before she died. Atkins, Krenwinkel, and Watson (the three who actually committed the murders) were all sentenced to death. Atkins died in prison in 2009, Krenwinkel was recommended for parole in May 2025, and Watson will be eligible for a parole hearing in October 2026. Patricia Krenwinkle (left) and Susan Atkins (right), with another Manson family member, Leslie Van Houten (in the middle). the case of Bobby Joe Long, aka the "Classified Ad Rapist," who killed at least 10 women in Florida in the '80s. Related: Long was a serial rapist and murderer who terrorized Florida's Tampa Bay area in 1984, killing at least 10 women after previously assaulting dozens. He would target his victims after finding them through personal ads in Florida, thus being called the "Classified Ad Rapist." Long's crime spree ended when 17-year-old Lisa McVey, whom he abducted and later released, provided crucial information that led to his arrest. Convicted of multiple crimes, Long was sentenced to death and executed by lethal injection in 2019. His last meal: Roast beef, bacon, French fries, and soda. That just about does it for the week in scariness! In the next issue, we're gonna talk alllllllll about missing people, even children. Until then, stay safe, keep the lights on, and I'll see you for another horrifying trip down the rabbit hole… Love this kind of content? Subscribe to the That Got Dark newsletter to get a weekly post just like this delivered directly to your inbox. It's a scary good time you won't want to miss. Do you have a weird, creepy, or shocking story you want to share? Perhaps there's a strange Wikipedia page you want to talk about? Tell me all about it at thatgotdark@ and who knows, maybe it'll be featured in a future edition of That Got Dark! Dial 988 in the United States to reach the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. The 988 Lifeline is available 24/7/365. Your conversations are free and confidential. Other international suicide helplines can be found at The Trevor Project, which provides help and suicide-prevention resources for LGBTQ youth, is 1-866-488-7386. If you are concerned that a child is experiencing or may be in danger of abuse, you can call or text the National Child Abuse Hotline at 1-800-422-4453 ( service can be provided in over 140 languages. Also in BuzzFeed: Also in BuzzFeed: Also in BuzzFeed:


Buzz Feed
30-07-2025
- Buzz Feed
Extremely Dark Facts And Stories July 2025
Do you love all things scary, dark, and creepy? Subscribe to the That Got Dark newsletter to get your weekly dopamine fix of the macabre delivered RIGHT to your inbox! Warning: Disturbing content ahead, including stories involving murder and extreme violence. On June 30, 2025, a 92-year-old man, Ryland Headley, was convicted of raping and murdering a woman named Louisa Dunne in Bristol, England — a crime he committed nearly 58 years earlier, in 1967. Dunne was 75 years old at the time. For decades, the case remained unsolved until a breakthrough came over 55 years later. In 2023, investigators reviewed the cold case and discovered new forensic evidence: a DNA sample from Dunne's clothing that matched Ryland Headley, who was already in the national DNA database. Headley had a history of sexually assaulting elderly women, with convictions from the 1970s. His palm print also matched one found on Dunne's windowsill. He was arrested and stood trial in 2025. On June 30, 2025, Headley was convicted of rape and murder, and the next day, he was sentenced to life in prison with a minimum of 20 years, effectively ensuring he will die in custody. The creepy (albeit interesting) grave of Timothy Clark Smith, who suffered from severe taphophobia — the fear of being buried alive. Smith took extraordinary precautions before his death in 1893, including having his grave custom-built with a cement shaft leading down from a glass window at the surface directly above his face. Inside the tomb, he arranged for a breathing tube, a bell in his hand, and reportedly a chisel or hammer — tools meant to help him alert others and potentially escape if he awoke underground, so he could be rescued. Today, the glass is heavily clouded by condensation and plant growth, limiting visibility. However, visitors in the past claimed to be able to see his skeleton. If you feel like checking it out yourself IRL, Smith's grave is in Evergreen Cemetery in New Haven, Vermont. On July 13, 2025, a 19-year-old died after falling into an industrial meat grinder. The victim, a sanitation worker at Tina's Burritos food processing plant in Vernon, California, reportedly fell into the meat grinder during a nighttime cleaning shift. Apparently, the machine turned on while he was cleaning it, pulling him in. Coworkers said they heard his cries for help but were unable to stop the equipment in time. Emergency responders arrived quickly but pronounced him dead at the scene. In a statement to The U.S. Sun, a Tina's Burritos spokesperson said, "He was cleaning an empty kettle that was being sanitized and prepped for the next day's production run." No foul play is suspected. In 2014, two Dutch students, Kris Kremers and Lisanne Froon, went missing while hiking a trail near Boquete, Panama. They never returned, and after weeks of searching, their belongings — including a backpack with their phones and camera — were found near a river. Oddly, where the backpack was found, Kremers' clothing was also found, neatly folded next to the river. Some time later, their bones and remains were discovered scattered nearby. In fact, Lisanne's boot was found with her foot still inside. It was also discovered that their phones had tried to call for help many times. What's even more disturbing is that the camera had strange nighttime photos taken in the dark jungle. You can see those photos here. Investigators believe the two likely got lost, had an accident, and died, while many think there may have been foul play. Their exact cause of death has never been confirmed. In 1987, a man named Kenneth Parks in Toronto, Canada, got out of bed one night and drove almost 15 miles from his home, where he killed his mother-in-law, then attempted to kill his while sleepwalking. Parks, who said he was unconscious through the whole ordeal, had entered his in-laws' home with a key he'd been given in the past. He bludgeoned his mother-in-law to death with a tire iron, then attempted to choke his father-in-law to death, who miraculously survived the attack. In an extra surprising twist, Parks then drove straight to a police station (still covered in blood), and told the cops, 'I think I have just killed two people.' Parks would even go on to say he was fast asleep when he surrendered. A year later, he was acquitted of murder and attempted murder using a rare legal defense known as 'non-insane automatism,' supported by evidence of parasomnia (a sleep disorder). Last month, authorities in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, discovered almost 400 corpses at a crematorium. The remains were found abandoned and piled across multiple rooms and had reportedly been there for up to two years. Grieving families had apparently been given fake ashes in place of their loved ones' remains. The crematorium's owner and an employee were arrested and charged with mishandling human remains. Officials are working to identify the deceased and notify families. In 2024, Russ McKamey — the owner of McKamey Manor, a notorious "torturer" haunted house attraction in Tennessee that was featured in a Hulu documentary — was arrested and charged with attempted murder, rape, and domestic assault after allegedly strangling his girlfriend during multiple incidents. McKamey Manor had already gained attention for its extreme and controversial experiences, where participants endured intense psychological and physical horror-style challenges. The arrest subsequently led to renewed scrutiny and public outcry over the attraction's practices. Charges were ultimately dropped in September 2024, and despite public backlash, McKamey Manor remains in operation. On July 12, 2025, a man died after falling down an elevator shaft while exploring the abandoned Southwest Detroit Hospital in the Corktown neighborhood. He was with a group of people inside the five-story building, which has been vacant since 2006. Emergency responders arrived, but he was pronounced dead at the scene. Police are still investigating the incident, but they say there are no signs of foul play. Earlier in July, a man was found dead, wrapped in a blue tarp and a blanket, in the open‑air donation area outside a Goodwill store in Pasadena, California. A store employee discovered the body among donated items near the drop‑off bins — though not inside a locked receptacle. There were no visible injuries on the man's body, but authorities suspect that drugs may have played a role in his death. The LA County coroner has deferred the cause of death pending further examination, and the man's identity remains private pending next-of-kin notification. In August 1978, Janet Parker, a medical photographer at the University of Birmingham, fell ill with what was eventually diagnosed as smallpox — despite the disease having been declared eradicated just a year earlier. She worked one floor above a laboratory that was still conducting research on the smallpox virus. Investigators believe the virus somehow escaped through a poorly sealed duct or air system, leading to her accidental exposure. Despite being hospitalized and placed in isolation, Janet died on Sept. 11, 1978. Her case sparked national panic, led to mass vaccinations in Birmingham, and triggered a formal inquiry that changed how dangerous viruses are handled in labs. She remains the last known person to die from smallpox. Back in 2012, a woman's stomach had to be removed after she'd been given a liquid nitrogen shot at a bar in Lancaster, England. 18‑year‑old Gaby Scanlon had been out celebrating her birthday at Oscar's Wine Bar and Bistro in Lancaster when she was served a nitro‑Jägermeister shot prepared with liquid nitrogen. Moments after drinking it, she experienced "agonising pain" as smoke poured from her mouth and nose, and her stomach rapidly expanded and ruptured. Doctors performed emergency surgery, removing her stomach and reconnecting her small intestine to her esophagus to save her life. After an investigation, the bar was fined £100,000 in September 2015 for failing its duty of care — no risk assessment was carried out, and staff hadn't warned customers to wait until the nitrogen had fully evaporated. On June 21, 2025, a hiker from Brazil, Juliana Marins, fell into a steep ravine near the summit of Mount Rinjani, an active volcano in Indonesia. Though she initially survived the 1,600-foot fall, poor weather and dangerous terrain delayed rescue efforts. Her body was found four days later, on June 24, almost 2,000 feet below the trail. An autopsy later confirmed she died from blunt force trauma. In other terrible hiking news, just days later, on June 18, 2025, six men were hiking near Rattlesnake Falls in Northern California when three of them — Matthew Anthony, Matthew Schoenecker, and Valentino Creus — jumped into the waterfall's pool and were swept away by the strong current. Creus had begun struggling in the water, prompting the other two to leap in to help, but all three drowned. The remote location, fast-moving water, and poor weather made search efforts difficult, and the remaining hikers had to be airlifted out for safety. Rescue divers located the victims' bodies on June 21, and they were officially identified over the next two days. In 19th-century Paris, the city's morgue became a popular tourist attraction where people came to view dead bodies on public display. Located near Notre Dame, the morgue showed the corpses of unidentified people behind glass windows in the hopes someone might recognize them. But instead of just helping with identification, it turned into a major spectacle, sometimes drawing more visitors than the Eiffel Tower. People lined up to stare, vendors actually started selling snacks outside, and newspapers turned the stories behind the bodies into sensational headlines. Bodies were shown until they decomposed too much, then wax figures were used. Eventually, the morgue was closed to the public in 1907 due to ethical concerns. In February 2013, a woman in Turkey was decapitated in a go-kart crash. The victim, 24-year-old Turkish university student Tuğba Erdoğan, had reportedly been racing around a corner when her vehicle collided with a safety barrier. Apparently, her scarf or seat belt became entangled around her neck, and the force of the impact decapitated her. Witnesses reported the belt tightened during the crash, though later investigations suggested the scarf may have also played a role by getting caught in the kart's shaft. Some families in the UK who lost loved ones in the recent Air India plane crash were given the wrong remains. A lawyer for about 20 of the families says DNA tests showed that some of the remains were mixed up — in one case, parts from more than one person were in the same coffin, and in another, the remains didn't match the family at all. One family even had to cancel a funeral when they found out the body wasn't their relative. Indian officials say they followed the proper steps and are now working with the UK to sort things out. In case you didn't know the original story: On June 12, 2025, an Air India Flight carrying 242 people — 230 passengers and 12 crew members — crashed into a medical college hostel shortly after takeoff from Ahmedabad's Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport. At least 270 people were killed (including those on the flight and on the ground), making it one of India's worst aviation disasters in history. A cause is still being investigated. Finally, in 1993, a lawyer named Garry Hoy died while trying to show off how strong the windows were in his office on the 24th floor of his office building, the Toronto-Dominion Centre. He threw himself against the glass — a stunt he had apparently done before — but this time, the glass didn't break, the entire window frame gave way, and he fell to his death. Garry's death was ruled an accident and is remembered as one of the strangest in legal history. The law firm he worked for closed a few years later, partly due to the shock of the event. 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