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Shocking Video Shows Southwest Plane Passenger Spitting and Pulling Woman's Hair

Shocking Video Shows Southwest Plane Passenger Spitting and Pulling Woman's Hair

Newsweek18-06-2025
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
Footage of a violent outburst aboard a Southwest Airlines flight shows a woman spitting, screaming, and yanking another passenger's hair as shocked travelers look on.
The incident allegedly took place while passengers were boarding a flight from New York's LaGuardia airport to Kansas City.
A series of Reddit posts showing footage of the altercation have since gone viral, with the initial clip showing a verbal dispute that quickly became violent as a woman yanked a female passenger's hair while flight crew and other passengers tried to intervene.
Stock image of rows of empty seats on a plane.
Stock image of rows of empty seats on a plane.
iStock / Getty Images Plus
After being physically restrained, she later begins spitting at the same woman before her head is held down by a Southwest employee.
Additional footage in a second Reddit post shows what happened next, with the woman resisting restraint and screaming as more passengers become involved.
According to Reddit users discussing the footage, she allegedly refused to sit next to a larger passenger and began lashing out physically and verbally.
"She said in part one, 'All this because I didn't want to sit next to a fat lady' or something like that," one user noted.
The woman's identity has not been confirmed, but some commenters speculated that alcohol or mental health issues may have contributed to her behavior.
In a short statement given to Newsweek, Southwest Airlines said, "The customer involved in the incident was removed from the flight and denied boarding.
"We commend our Team for their professionalism during the incident."
In-Flight Safety
The confrontation has renewed discussions on in-flight safety and crew response tactics.
According to Cabin Crew Wings, flight attendants are trained to use calm, quiet interventions when dealing with potentially disruptive passengers.
"There's nothing more counterproductive than embarrassing or provoking an upset passenger," the guidance states. "It could just escalate the problem."
In situations where talking fails, the site recommends involving colleagues and using seat changes or distractions—options unavailable in this incident, as the situation quickly escalated.
No-Fly Lists
This kind of behavior is almost certain to land the woman on Southwest Airlines' no-fly list, with Travel+Leisure noting, "Unruly behavior is the number one reason passengers end up on an airline's no-fly list.
"This includes making threats or acting in a violent manner that prevents airline crew members from doing their jobs, which subsequently impacts the safety of other passengers."
As video of the Southwest flight continues to circulate online, many viewers have expressed outrage at the woman's actions.
"Enjoy never flying again," quipped one user, though whether criminal charges or airline-imposed sanctions follow remains to be seen.
Newsweek has contacted Ace-Cuddler for comment via Reddit.
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Former FBI Agents Are Exposing The Wildest Secrets They Can Reveal Without Killing Us, And Holy Crap
Former FBI Agents Are Exposing The Wildest Secrets They Can Reveal Without Killing Us, And Holy Crap

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

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Former FBI Agents Are Exposing The Wildest Secrets They Can Reveal Without Killing Us, And Holy Crap

As an avid Criminal Minds-watcher, I've always wondered what it was actually like to work as an FBI agent. A while back, Reddit user mr_squirell asked, "FBI/CIA agents of Reddit, what's something that you can tell us without killing us?" Here's what they said: Note: Obviously we can't confirm all of these stories, but these people are supposedly speaking from their own experiences as alleged government employees. 1."I worked with a woman who was a former NSA. We would always beg her to tell us stuff, but she never did. The one thing she did say, though, was that during training, they show them a video of a bunch of things they've found out about and stopped. She said she hardly slept for two weeks after watching that." —jseego 2."My dad worked for GCHQ in the '80s doing voice recognition, and he can't say anything more for another decade. The technology used that lets Siri and Alexa recognize you today was also being used in the '80s... Just a bit slower..." —arabidopsis Related: 3."I was an analyst, not an agent/officer. 85% of all classified material is classified because of how it was collected, not because it is juicy/useful. Yes, your boss and co-workers said that stuff about you." —ben70 4."We are all told never to use sites like Reddit. Social media in general is pretty much a no-go." —Throwaway93ee90299 5."An ex-Company man once told me that the movie Get Smart was more accurate than James Bond." —spiff2268 6."I talked with some CIA recruiters towards the end of college and almost applied earnestly after a large group Q&A and then a much smaller one. The thing that stuck out to me was that the guys said most CIA agents are out of shape and have limited combat training with guns or hand-to-hand. They made it clear that it's the military that uses force. If confronted, they were trained to immediately surrender or to drop their bags and run if possible." —dring157 Related: 7."If you go through the FBI interview process, it takes a while. Chances are, you're going to have to spend some time working on crimes against children, which is really tough, and most people don't want to do it." —thermobollocks 8."My dad worked for the government, and he told me that any time he had a meaningful interaction with someone who wasn't American (i.e. going over to my friend's house for Lunar New Year or going on vacation to Canada), he had to report it all, and if he saw anything suspicious." —AudiKitty "Yep. I went through a clearance upgrade and got asked about a couple of people that I know through friends who I didn't include on my paperwork and if I knew their background." —derpyfox 9."I worked with the Australian Federal police with the spider squad doing 'computer stuff' for them in regards to pedophiles and finding trafficking victims. It was the most heartbreaking work, but when you got the pedophiles, the office looked like NASA after a Mars landing." —dr_m_a_dman "I don't know if I'm allowed to say, but a mentor who definitely wasn't supposed to tell me used to be a white hat for the FBI. Apparently, all he did was search for pedophiles by tracking child sexual abuse images. He said he didn't stay for very long because it was messing with his mental health." —mastershow05 10."My spouse is an FBI agent. One of the things they had to do at the FBI Academy was go to the Holocaust Memorial Museum in DC. The lesson was what can happen if you blindly follow orders without ever questioning the morality/intent behind them. I found that pretty compelling, and I was glad to hear that it's part of their training." —bukunothing Related: 11."Not an FBI or CIA officer, but my sister is a district attorney, and over the years, she has prosecuted a number of animal-cruelty cases. This led to her having an ongoing partnership with the FBI for the last several years. It turns out the FBI started tracking animal abuse cases about 10-15 years ago due to the incredibly high correlation between abusing animals when you're young and becoming a serial violent offender as an adult." —TheDongerNeedsFood 12."I have a relative who retired from the NSA a few years ago. She has talked about a few things in generalities, nothing specific. Among them: Alcoholism in general is rife in the agency. When you cannot speak to anyone outside the agency about your work, it becomes nearly impossible to confide in anyone close to you. Even if you have close work friends or family, you have to be careful what you say because not everyone is read into every program. Two people can sit next to each other in the same office, working on the same subject for months, and never talk about it with each other, even though they're close friends outside the agency. So people turn to the bottle. Her husband worked for a different government agency and also had a Top Secret-SCI clearance, but she couldn't talk about her work with him (nor could he with her, but his didn't involve the intelligence community)." —NetworkLlama 13."Want to work for them? Prepare to do a fair amount of paper work. The form will ask for each of your employer's contact information, contact information of friends, your history of addresses, etc. They will then send an agent to interview a number of these people. Next, you have to take a psychological exam and be interviewed by a psychologist. Finally, you'll have one last interview with a polygraph and a professional lie detector." —Sw0rDz 14."The agency employs psychiatrists who are cleared to be read into almost any program. Going to them, though, is often seen as a mark of shame among other agency employees, so they are not used nearly as often as they should be." —NetworkLlama Related: 15."Properly secret programs and operations are never named in any way that indicates what they are actually about. They're generally just two words chosen at random and that would rarely come up in normal conversation, stuff like 'Cracked Gorilla' (which I just made up off the top of my head)." —xxkoloblicinxx 16."I applied to be an accountant at the FBI out of college. On the first or second page of the application, it asks if you have ever done any illegal drug. Not wanting to lie, I said yes, and it immediately ended the application process. It's shocking to me that there are so many FBI agents, and absolutely none of them have ever smoked weed." —scotchglass22 finally, "Anyone who is a US citizen can apply to join the CIA. It isn't that hard. If you have any kind of degree in computer science, statistics, engineering, or accounting, and don't have anything that would mess up your getting a clearance, getting a job would be relatively easy there. Working at the CIA is far more boring than you would think." —Intrepid-Client9449 Responses have been edited for length/clarity. So, to all the former FBI and CIA workers out there. What are some other secrets you can share about the job? Let us know in the comments below. Or, if you prefer to remain anonymous, share your submission in the form below. Also in Internet Finds: Also in Internet Finds: Also in Internet Finds:

20 Shocking Things People Discovered About Someone They "Knew Well," Which Will Leave You FLOORED
20 Shocking Things People Discovered About Someone They "Knew Well," Which Will Leave You FLOORED

Yahoo

time9 hours ago

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20 Shocking Things People Discovered About Someone They "Knew Well," Which Will Leave You FLOORED

Reddit user _Walking_Detriment_ asked the community, "What's the most shocking thing you found out about someone you know?" Welp, people revealed some pretty unhinged secrets that their family, friends, and close acquaintances thought they could hide. But ultimately, the cat got out of the bag. So, here are some pretty wild, shocking, and dark things people discovered about someone they knew: Note: Some submissions were pulled from this Reddit thread by user u/skadarski. Warning: Some submissions include topics of violence and domestic abuse. Please proceed with caution. 1."I worked with an ex-Marine closely for years. On my last day, I asked him to help me with something, and he said, 'Oh, sure, ask the guy with one leg.' I told him he was full of shit, and he took a hammer and hit his shin, to which I heard metal. Thinking it was a joke, I asked him to lift his pants. SURE ENOUGH, THIS MAN HAD ONE LEG, AND I NEVER KNEW." —u/otis722 2."My wife died two years ago at the young age of 49. A week after her passing, I decided to go through her personal devices to see if there were any other friends or family that needed to be contacted. What I found instead was that my wife had been chasing after other men during our entire 12 years together. When she met me, she had a side boyfriend that she was crushing on, but his life was too much of a mess for her to seriously consider him as a suitor (she was a single mom with two kids, and needed stability). But she loved the attention he showered her with, constantly begging her for sex. And there were other men that she met online. In total, I was up to six boyfriends she had during the time of our relationship. I stopped digging because each new boyfriend discovery absolutely destroyed me." "It did explain, however, why our relationship stalled after we moved in together. She became disinterested in growing deeper in a relationship with me, and was doing the minimum to keep stringing me along because I was paying the bills for her and her kids. And because I genuinely loved her, I was always hoping things would eventually get better between us. But things were never going to get better — only worse, because she was actively sabotaging our chances." —u/workerbee223 Related: 3."We found out AT THE FUNERAL that my wife's grandpa had a second family. There was a group of people huddling around his widow (she was 90 at the time) that no one recognized. They were chatting it up with grandma for quite some time, and eventually, my wife's dad and aunt asked them to leave. There were kids, adults, and seniors in this group — multiple generations of people. My mother-in-law finally fessed up and said they were his 'other family.' Jaws hit the floor, and it was really weird for the rest of the ceremony. They also tried to 'claim' some of his stuff afterwards. I had to watch my grandma's house like a hawk because they would snoop around and try to say things like 'he would want us to have this.'" —u/slaptac 4."In the mid-'90s, I came home from my honeymoon to find a card in my front door from the FBI. My neighbor across the hall popped out and asked if everything was okay because there were a bunch of cops looking for me. It turned out my best friend of five years, who I thought moved away to be with his girlfriend, was seducing women around the country and robbing them, draining their bank accounts, and vanishing. He even stole their cars, drove to his next target city, and either sold the car to a chop shop or ditched it. He left a jacket behind at one of his victims' houses, and it had my name and phone number in his pocket. I went to the federal building in downtown Chicago, answered all of their questions, and convinced them I had no knowledge of any of this. After a few hours, I agreed to let them know if I ever heard from him." "About six months later, he called me out of the blue. He said he was back in Chicago, and he tried to sell me some stereo equipment. I asked to hang out, and he was suspicious. Eventually, I convinced him to go play paintball with me as long as I paid. I called the guy from the FBI whose card I still had, said I was playing paintball with him on a Saturday, and he said, 'Thanks, we'll keep in touch.' Saturday morning came around. After playing paintball for a few hours, we saw two black SUVs pull into the parking lot. My friend thought nothing of it, but it was definitely conspicuous. Here's the kicker: two of the guys we played paintball with turned to my friend and addressed him by his full name (damn, we were shooting paintballs back and forth with these dudes for three hours!). They took him away in the SUVs, and I acted surprised. I never heard from the FBI again. He spent six years in prison. My wife never liked him, and I despised him for what he was doing and was pissed he tried to sell me someone's stuff." —u/Apprehensive_Book520 5."I had recently graduated as a therapist working in a forensic clinic. We were interviewing interns for their placement (part of a graduate program). This was an important interview because a lot of our clinical staff, including me, were hired out of an internship. A lot of the applicants were from the same graduate school that I went to, so I knew a lot of these people personally. One of the applicants was a guy with whom I had a bunch of classes. He was taking the program part-time, so he had been in the program when I started and was still there when I graduated. We had maybe five classes together. I knew him as a very smart, but also very sarcastic, middle-aged guy. I knew he worked as a hairdresser outside of class at his boyfriend's salon, which caused him to be very popular amongst our class for his propensity to give free haircuts." "He gave a great interview, and I was pretty sure he was going to be the guy we hired. But we still had to get the basic background checks back. When we did, as it would turn out, he had committed aggravated assault and a homicide when he was 18, spent two decades incarcerated, and was on lifetime probation. He did his time, and I'm sure right now he's an excellent therapist. But because we worked in a forensics clinic and do state regulation, we couldn't hire anyone on probation/parole on the clinical team." —u/ConneryFTW 6."I found out as an adult that my stepdad (who had been around since I was seven years old) did time in prison for murder. Two decades before he met my mom, he walked in on a man having sex with his then-wife. Clearly, it didn't end well for the other guy. He did three years in prison because of the nature of the crime, and the laws in Texas being lenient on that type of stuff." —u/On-A-Plain187 Related: 7."My mother has a somewhat strange belief that after death, a person must be buried 'whole.' Decades ago, when my grandma had to have her leg amputated because of diabetes, my mother dug a hole behind our house and stored the amputated leg there. I believe it didn't rot due to formalin or something similar. When my grandmother died, my mother took that leg and placed it in her coffin. Due to the coffin's design, no one noticed her real leg was there. Everyone likely assumed it was a prosthetic leg. My mother told me this after several years, and I am still grossed out by it to this day." —u/Magician_Moogle 8."I found out a guy I knew faked a limp so he could get sympathy discounts at the movie theater..." —u/BitterStudy607 9."I have childhood friends who discovered after their dad's death (the kids were adults by then) that their dad had fraudulently taken out full powers of attorney on them. He refinanced his house in their names, and never paid any taxes." —u/Damn_Dog_Inappropes 10."The guy who put the roof on my parents' house and came out and did some repairs and whatnot around their home turned out to be a legit hitman. Years before he was a roofer, he was hired to murder a couple. Then he ended up murdering the people who hired him to do the hit. I believe he eventually confessed to killing four people total, but authorities suspected it could've been more. I kind of vaguely remember the guy. Of course, my dad was like, 'Nice fellow and a good handyman — hate to lose him!'" —u/CalmCatine Related: 11."I worked with two different people at two different places. They both ended up going to prison for making counterfeit US money. Both workplaces were printing companies. I had replaced the first guy, who had been demoted for not being a good leader/supervisor. When the Secret Service approached his mobile home, he stuffed hoards of bills in PLASTIC trash bags and tried to make his escape by running through the woods. These tore multiple holes in the bags, leaving a scattering of counterfeit bills trailing behind him through the forest before his inevitable capture." "I am the one who promoted the second guy to run the scanner on the third shift, back when high-end scanners were a quarter of a million dollars and complex. Only highly-skilled operators could get the best results…he scanned the bills, made the plates and ran the press, all on Saturday nights when production was closed." —u/TurtleRockDuane 12."I found out that my aunt's first husband wasn't killed in a car accident while visiting family overseas like I was told when I was younger. He was in witness protection because he had pissed off some affiliates of an Irish cartel. My aunt even thought he was dead. After four years, the authorities got in touch with her saying that he had been alive, but he was eventually killed by the men he was hiding from. They sent his body back to be buried in the US." —u/RosemaryGoez 13."I know of the girl who was married to my uncle (my dad's brother). They were divorced before I was born. She became a foster parent and was big into exotic animals. She tried to 'trade' one of her adopted kids for a monkey. It was all over the news. I saw it and was like, 'That's messed up.' Then, my aunt called me and asked me about the story, and then told me who it was." —u/UnicornFarts84 14."I worked with a guy in the mid-'80s who killed his best friend. They were drinking at a bar and somehow got into an argument (I was told they were as tight as they could be). The guy punched his best friend. The guy fell, hit his head, and died. He was lucky and somehow got work release. His father picked him up from prison every morning and came to take him back when our shift was over. l always wondered what happened to him and when he was fully released." —u/namvet67 15."I'm sure I'm not the only '70s kid who found this out, but my mom revealed that she and my dad had an 'open marriage.' The kind where he said: 'I'm going to fuck other women, and you can fuck these friends of mine — let me have my fun, or I'm out of here.' Apparently, what followed was three bad years together, as my dad tried to convince my mom to participate in swinging, orgies, a poly relationship — the works. And my mom, who was barely 22 with two babies, went along with all of it to keep him happy and 'save their marriage.'" "It also explains why I was confused that my dad came home with random women. I thought they were my mom's friends, but they really, really weren't." —u/brainisonfire 16."My father told me that my mom (a teacher) used to steal the money for school trips where she worked. For some twisted reason, she moved my sister and me to the same school. I never understood why the other teachers were so bitter towards us. Apparently, there was a big scandal between the teachers, but we had no idea — the worst years of my life, finally explained." —u/nnaralia Related: 17."After my grandmother died, we found out she'd been married before my grandfather, and had four kids. When she and the first guy decided to split, they just dumped the kids off at an orphanage and went their separate ways. She then married my grandpa, had another family, and just never mentioned the fact that she had four other kids. Apparently, my grandpa knew the whole time and never said anything about it either." —u/PersonMcNugget 18."My mom suffered from cancer, and one night, while she was on strong medication for pain, she grabbed my arm and told me, 'I know the truth about your college letters. You didn't get rejected — you got accepted, and that's why you didn't go.'" —u/Captainbuttsreads 19."My mom attempted to miscarry me so she wouldn't have to get an abortion. She is now very jealous that I am leading the life she always wanted (educated, childless, and climbing the corporate ladder), and frequently takes it out on me in passive-aggressive ways. I'm just glad the drinking and drugs she did while she was pregnant didn't seem to have a lasting impact on me (other than maybe the fact that I black out quickly when drinking)." —u/thraelen finally, "About 25 years ago, one of my friends was killed in a house fire. He had been rooming with another friend at their mother's house. Our friend group thought that the fire was just an unfortunate accident for a couple of weeks. The surviving friend even stayed at my house, where all of our friend group kept hugging and comforting him as he weaved heroic stories. He tried getting his mom out of the house first and then tried his best to go back in for our friend, but by then, the flames and smoke were just too bad. Then one day, the police showed up and arrested him." "They also made me and my husband go to the station for questioning since we were letting the dude stay with us. We were questioned for HOURS about the friend, the fire, and what we knew about how the fire started. I'm not sure if they were trying to tag us as accomplices or just trying to piece everything together. Thankfully, it was clear that we were innocent and knew only what our 'friend' had told us. As it turned out, our 'good' friend and his mom decided to burn their house down for the insurance money. They thought having a 'best friend in the whole world' die in that fire would sell the story better. They straight-up murdered our very good friend and committed arson for what would have been about $20,000 in their pockets after the mortgage was paid off. Luckily for the murderous bastard, he was not able (or willing) to post bond, and he stayed in jail, where he currently still rots. Had he bonded out, I truly do not think he would have survived our friend group. We were a pretty vindictive bunch back then." —u/Skippy_T_Magificent Note: Some submissions have been edited for length and/or clarity. Also in Internet Finds: Also in Internet Finds: Also in Internet Finds: Solve the daily Crossword

20 Shocking Secrets People Kept From Family Friends
20 Shocking Secrets People Kept From Family Friends

Buzz Feed

time9 hours ago

  • Buzz Feed

20 Shocking Secrets People Kept From Family Friends

Reddit user _Walking_Detriment_ asked the community, "What's the most shocking thing you found out about someone you know?" Welp, people revealed some pretty unhinged secrets that their family, friends, and close acquaintances thought they could hide. But ultimately, the cat got out of the bag. So, here are some pretty wild, shocking, and dark things people discovered about someone they knew: "I worked with an ex-Marine closely for years. On my last day, I asked him to help me with something, and he said, 'Oh, sure, ask the guy with one leg.' I told him he was full of shit, and he took a hammer and hit his shin, to which I heard metal. Thinking it was a joke, I asked him to lift his pants. SURE ENOUGH, THIS MAN HAD ONE LEG, AND I NEVER KNEW." "My wife died two years ago at the young age of 49. A week after her passing, I decided to go through her personal devices to see if there were any other friends or family that needed to be contacted. What I found instead was that my wife had been chasing after other men during our entire 12 years together. When she met me, she had a side boyfriend that she was crushing on, but his life was too much of a mess for her to seriously consider him as a suitor (she was a single mom with two kids, and needed stability). But she loved the attention he showered her with, constantly begging her for sex. And there were other men that she met online. In total, I was up to six boyfriends she had during the time of our relationship. I stopped digging because each new boyfriend discovery absolutely destroyed me." "We found out AT THE FUNERAL that my wife's grandpa had a second family. There was a group of people huddling around his widow (she was 90 at the time) that no one recognized. They were chatting it up with grandma for quite some time, and eventually, my wife's dad and aunt asked them to leave. There were kids, adults, and seniors in this group — multiple generations of people. My mother-in-law finally fessed up and said they were his 'other family.' Jaws hit the floor, and it was really weird for the rest of the ceremony. They also tried to 'claim' some of his stuff afterwards. I had to watch my grandma's house like a hawk because they would snoop around and try to say things like 'he would want us to have this.'" "In the mid-'90s, I came home from my honeymoon to find a card in my front door from the FBI. My neighbor across the hall popped out and asked if everything was okay because there were a bunch of cops looking for me. It turned out my best friend of five years, who I thought moved away to be with his girlfriend, was seducing women around the country and robbing them, draining their bank accounts, and vanishing. He even stole their cars, drove to his next target city, and either sold the car to a chop shop or ditched it. He left a jacket behind at one of his victims' houses, and it had my name and phone number in his pocket. I went to the federal building in downtown Chicago, answered all of their questions, and convinced them I had no knowledge of any of this. After a few hours, I agreed to let them know if I ever heard from him." "I had recently graduated as a therapist working in a forensic clinic. We were interviewing interns for their placement (part of a graduate program). This was an important interview because a lot of our clinical staff, including me, were hired out of an internship. A lot of the applicants were from the same graduate school that I went to, so I knew a lot of these people personally. One of the applicants was a guy with whom I had a bunch of classes. He was taking the program part-time, so he had been in the program when I started and was still there when I graduated. We had maybe five classes together. I knew him as a very smart, but also very sarcastic, middle-aged guy. I knew he worked as a hairdresser outside of class at his boyfriend's salon, which caused him to be very popular amongst our class for his propensity to give free haircuts." "I found out as an adult that my stepdad (who had been around since I was seven years old) did time in prison for murder. Two decades before he met my mom, he walked in on a man having sex with his then-wife. Clearly, it didn't end well for the other guy. He did three years in prison because of the nature of the crime, and the laws in Texas being lenient on that type of stuff." "My mother has a somewhat strange belief that after death, a person must be buried 'whole.' Decades ago, when my grandma had to have her leg amputated because of diabetes, my mother dug a hole behind our house and stored the amputated leg there. I believe it didn't rot due to formalin or something similar. When my grandmother died, my mother took that leg and placed it in her coffin. Due to the coffin's design, no one noticed her real leg was there. Everyone likely assumed it was a prosthetic leg. My mother told me this after several years, and I am still grossed out by it to this day." "I found out a guy I knew faked a limp so he could get sympathy discounts at the movie theater..." "I have childhood friends who discovered after their dad's death (the kids were adults by then) that their dad had fraudulently taken out full powers of attorney on them. He refinanced his house in their names, and never paid any taxes." "The guy who put the roof on my parents' house and came out and did some repairs and whatnot around their home turned out to be a legit hitman. Years before he was a roofer, he was hired to murder a couple. Then he ended up murdering the people who hired him to do the hit. I believe he eventually confessed to killing four people total, but authorities suspected it could've been more. I kind of vaguely remember the guy. Of course, my dad was like, 'Nice fellow and a good handyman — hate to lose him!'" "I worked with two different people at two different places. They both ended up going to prison for making counterfeit US money. Both workplaces were printing companies. I had replaced the first guy, who had been demoted for not being a good leader/supervisor. When the Secret Service approached his mobile home, he stuffed hoards of bills in PLASTIC trash bags and tried to make his escape by running through the woods. These tore multiple holes in the bags, leaving a scattering of counterfeit bills trailing behind him through the forest before his inevitable capture." "I found out that my aunt's first husband wasn't killed in a car accident while visiting family overseas like I was told when I was younger. He was in witness protection because he had pissed off some affiliates of an Irish cartel. My aunt even thought he was dead. After four years, the authorities got in touch with her saying that he had been alive, but he was eventually killed by the men he was hiding from. They sent his body back to be buried in the US." "I know of the girl who was married to my uncle (my dad's brother). They were divorced before I was born. She became a foster parent and was big into exotic animals. She tried to 'trade' one of her adopted kids for a monkey. It was all over the news. I saw it and was like, 'That's messed up.' Then, my aunt called me and asked me about the story, and then told me who it was." "I worked with a guy in the mid-'80s who killed his best friend. They were drinking at a bar and somehow got into an argument (I was told they were as tight as they could be). The guy punched his best friend. The guy fell, hit his head, and died. He was lucky and somehow got work release. His father picked him up from prison every morning and came to take him back when our shift was over. l always wondered what happened to him and when he was fully released." "I'm sure I'm not the only '70s kid who found this out, but my mom revealed that she and my dad had an 'open marriage.' The kind where he said: 'I'm going to fuck other women, and you can fuck these friends of mine — let me have my fun, or I'm out of here.' Apparently, what followed was three bad years together, as my dad tried to convince my mom to participate in swinging, orgies, a poly relationship — the works. And my mom, who was barely 22 with two babies, went along with all of it to keep him happy and 'save their marriage.'" "My father told me that my mom (a teacher) used to steal the money for school trips where she worked. For some twisted reason, she moved my sister and me to the same school. I never understood why the other teachers were so bitter towards us. Apparently, there was a big scandal between the teachers, but we had no idea — the worst years of my life, finally explained." "After my grandmother died, we found out she'd been married before my grandfather, and had four kids. When she and the first guy decided to split, they just dumped the kids off at an orphanage and went their separate ways. She then married my grandpa, had another family, and just never mentioned the fact that she had four other kids. Apparently, my grandpa knew the whole time and never said anything about it either." "My mom suffered from cancer, and one night, while she was on strong medication for pain, she grabbed my arm and told me, 'I know the truth about your college letters. You didn't get rejected — you got accepted, and that's why you didn't go.'" "My mom attempted to miscarry me so she wouldn't have to get an abortion. She is now very jealous that I am leading the life she always wanted (educated, childless, and climbing the corporate ladder), and frequently takes it out on me in passive-aggressive ways. I'm just glad the drinking and drugs she did while she was pregnant didn't seem to have a lasting impact on me (other than maybe the fact that I black out quickly when drinking)." And finally, "About 25 years ago, one of my friends was killed in a house fire. He had been rooming with another friend at their mother's house. Our friend group thought that the fire was just an unfortunate accident for a couple of weeks. The surviving friend even stayed at my house, where all of our friend group kept hugging and comforting him as he weaved heroic stories. He tried getting his mom out of the house first and then tried his best to go back in for our friend, but by then, the flames and smoke were just too bad. Then one day, the police showed up and arrested him."

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