Charles Darwin's finest !!!
- #1
-
LOS ANGELES, CA. Ani Saduki, 33, and his brother
decided to remove a
bees
nest from a shed on their property with the aid
of a pineapple. A
pineapple
is an illegal firecracker which is the explosive
equivalent of
one-half
stick of dynamite. They ignited the fuse and
retreated to watch
from
inside their home, behind a window some 10 feet
away from the hive/shed.
The concussion of the explosion shattered the
window inwards,
seriously
lacerating Ani. Deciding Mr. Saduki needed
stitches, the brothers
headed
out to go to a nearby hospital. While walking
towards their car, Ani
was
stung three times by the surviving bees.
Unbeknownst to either brother,
Ani
was allergic to bee venom, and died of
Suffocation enroute to the
hospital.
- #2
-
Derrick L. Richards, 28, was charged in
April in Minneapolis with
third-degree
murder in the death of his beloved cousin,
Kenneth E. Richards. According to police, Derrick
suggested a game of Russian roulette
and
put a semiautomatic pistol (instead of the more
traditional revolver) to Ken's head and fired.
- #3
-
PHILLIPSBURG, NJ. An
unidentified 29 year old male choked to death on
a
sequined
pastie he had orally removed from an exotic
dancer at a local
establishment.
"I didn't think he was going to eat
it," the dancer
identified
only as "Ginger" said, adding "He
was really drunk."
- #4
-
In February, according to
police in WINDSOR, ONT., Daniel Kolta, 27,
and
Randy Taylor, 33, died in a head-on collision,
thus earning a tie in
the
game of chicken they were playing with their
snowmobiles.
- #5
-
MOSCOW, Russia-A drunk
security man asked a colleague at the Moscow
bank
they were guarding to stab his bulletproof vest
to see if it would
protect
him against a knife attack. It didn't, and the
25-year-old guard
died
of a heart wound. (It's good to see the Russians
getting into the spirit of the Darwin Awards.)
- #6
- In FRANCE, Jacques LeFevrier left nothing to chance when he decided
to
commit
suicide. He stood at the top of a tall cliff and
tied a noose around
his
neck. He tied the other end of the rope to a
large rock. He drank some
poison
and set fire to his clothes. He even tried to
shoot himself at the
last
moment. He jumped and fired the pistol. The
bullet missed him
completely
and cut through the rope above him. Free of the
threat of
hanging,
he plunged into the sea. The sudden dunking
extinguished the
flames
and made him vomit the poison. He was dragged out
of the water by
a
kind fisherman and was taken to a hospital, where
he died of hypothermia.
- #7
-
RENTON, WASHINGTON, USA. A
Renton, Washington man tried to commit a
robbery.
This was probably his first attempt, as suggested
by the fact that
he
had no previous record of violent crime, and by
his terminally stupid
choices
as listed below:
- The
target was H&J Leather &
Firearms, a gun shop.
- The shop
was full of customers, in a state
where a substantial portion
of the adult population is
licensed to carry concealed
handguns in public
places.
- To enter
the shop, he had to step around a
marked Police patrol car parked
at the front door.
- An
officer in uniform was standing
next to the counter, having coffee
before reporting to duty.
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Upon
seeing the officer, the would-be
robber
announced a holdup and fired a few wild shots.
The officer and a
clerk
promptly returned fire, removing him from the
gene pool. Several
other
customers also drew their guns, but didn't fire.
No one else
was
hurt.
...
AND THE TOP DARWIN AWARD WINNER IS ... from THOMPSON, MANATOBA, CANADA.
Telephone
relay company night watchman Edward
Baker, 31, was killed early
Christmas
morning by excessive microwave radiation exposure. He was
apparently
attempting to keep warm next to a telecommunications
feedhorn.
Baker had been suspended on a safety
violation once last year, according to
Northern
Manatoba Signal Relay spokesperson Tanya Cooke. She noted
that
Baker's
earlier infraction was for defeating a safety shut-off
switch and
entering a restricted maintenance
catwalk in order to stand in front of the
microwave
dish. He had told coworkers that it was the only way he
could
stay warm during his twelve-hour
shift at the station, where winter
temperatures
often dip to forty below zero. Microwaves can heat water
molecules within human tissue in the same way that they
heat food in
microwave ovens. For his Christmas
shift, Baker reportedly brought a twelve
pack of
beer and a plastic lawn chair, which he positioned
directly in line with the
strongest microwave beam. Baker had not been told about a
tenfold
boost in microwave power planned
that night to handle the anticipated
increase in
holiday long-distance calling traffic. Baker's body was
discovered
by the daytime watchman, John Burns, who was greeted by
an odor
he mistook for a Christmas roast he
thought Baker must have prepared as a surprise. Burns
also reported to NMSR company officials that Baker's
unfinished beers had exploded.
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