20 Most Unusual Deaths Over The Oast 20 Years
Some very unusual ways to meet your maker.   Some just seem like very poor judgment calls though.  In no particular order.
1979: Robert Williams, a worker at a Ford  Motor Co. plant, was the first known human to be killed by a robot,  after the arm of a one-ton factory robot hit him in the head.
2005: Lee Seung Seop, a 28-year-old South  Korean, collapsed of fatigue and died after playing the videogame  StarCraft online for almost 50 consecutive hours in an Internet cafe.
2007: Kevin Whitrick, a 42-year-old man, committed suicide by hanging himself live on a webcam during an Internet chat session. 17 More after the break...

1998: Tom and Eileen Lonergan were stranded  while scuba diving with a group of divers off Australia’s Great Barrier  Reef. The group’s boat accidentally abandoned them owing to an incorrect  head count taken by the dive boat crew. Their bodies were never  recovered. The incident inspired the film Open Water and an episode of  20/20.
1996: Sharon Lopatka, an Internet  entrepreneur from Maryland, allegedly solicited a man via the Internet  to torture and kill her for the purpose of sexual gratification. Her  killer, Robert Fredrick Glass, was convicted of voluntary manslaughter  for the homicide.

2009: Taylor Mitchell, a Canadian folk  singer, was attacked and killed by two coyotes[159], only the second  recorded human fatality from a coyote attack.
1986: Over 1,700 people were killed almost  instantly near Lake Nyos in Cameroon when a mass of approximately 100  million cubic metres of carbon dioxide that had collected at the bottom  of the lake due to seepage from geothermal sources was suddenly released  on August 21, 1986. The gas cloud immediately settled (carbon dioxide  is heavier than air) and covered an area of up to 12 miles (20 km) from  the lake, killing all oxygen-breathing life almost instantly – although  the nearby vegetation, which consumes carbon dioxide and releases  oxygen, flourished afterwards.
1993: Actor Brandon Lee, son of Bruce Lee,  was shot and killed by Michael Massee using a prop gun while filming the  movie The Crow. A cartridge with only a primer and a bullet was fired  in the pistol before the fatal scene; this caused a squib load, in which  the primer provided enough force to push the bullet out of the  cartridge and into the barrel of the revolver, where it became stuck.  The malfunction went unnoticed by the crew, and the same gun was used  again later to shoot the death scene. His death was not instantly  recognized by the crew or other actors; they believed he was still  acting

1999: Owen Hart, a Canadian-born  professional wrestler for WWF, died during a pay-per-view event when  performing a stunt. It was planned to have Owen come down from the  rafters of the Kemper Arena on a safety harness tied to a rope to make  his ring entrance. The safety latch was released and Owen dropped 78  feet (24 m), bouncing chest-first off the top rope resulting in a  severed aorta, which caused his lungs to fill with blood.
2007: Jennifer Strange, a 28-year-old woman  from Sacramento, died of water intoxication while trying to win a  Nintendo Wii console in a KDND 107.9 “The End” radio station’s “Hold  Your Wee for a Wii” contest, which involved drinking large quantities of  water without urinating
2009: Vladimir Likhonos, a Ukrainian  student, died after accidentally dipping a piece of homemade chewing gum  into explosives he was using on another project. He mistook the jar of  explosive for citric acid, which was also on his desk. The gum exploded,  blowing off his jaw and most of the lower part of his face
2008: Isaiah Otieno, 20, a Kenyan student  living in Cranbrook, British Columbia, Canada, was crushed when a  single-engine Bell 206 helicopter crashed on top of him and burst into  flames when he was walking to mail home a letter. Otieno did not hear  the helicopter because he was wearing headphones at the time.
2004: Phillip Quinn, a 24-year-old from  Kent, Washington was killed during an attempt to heat up a lava lamp  bulb on his kitchen stove while observing it from a few feet away. The  heat built up pressure in the bulb until it exploded, spraying shards of  glass. One pierced his heart, killing him. The circumstances of his  death were later repeated and confirmed in a 2006 episode of the popular  science television series
2001: Bernd-Jürgen Brandes from Germany was  voluntarily stabbed repeatedly and then partly eaten by Armin Meiwes  (who was later called the Cannibal of Rothenburg). Brandes had answered  an internet advertisement by Meiwes looking for someone for this  purpose. Brandes explicitly stated in his will that he wished to be  killed and eaten
1998: Every player on the Basanga soccer  team at a game in the Democratic Republic of the Congo between Bena  Tshadi and visitors Basanga was struck by a fork bolt of lightning,  killing them all instantly
1993: Michael A. Shingledecker Jr. was  killed almost instantly when he and a friend were struck by a pickup  truck while lying flat on the yellow dividing line of a two-lane highway  in Polk, Pennsylvania. They were copying a daredevil stunt from the  movie The Program. Marco Birkhimer died of a similar accident while  performing the same stunt in Route 206 of Bordentown, New Jersey

2006: Steve Irwin, an Australian television  personality and naturalist known as the Crocodile Hunter, died when his  heart was impaled by a short-tail stingray barb while filming a  documentary entitled “Ocean’s Deadliest” in Queensland‘s Great Barrier  Ree
1993: Garry Hoy, a 38-year old lawyer and a  senior partner at the Holden Day Wilson Law firm in Toronto, Canada,  fell to his death on July 9, 1993, after he threw himself against a  window on the 24th floor of theToronto-Dominion Centre in an attempt to  prove to a group of visiting Law Students that the glass was  “unbreakable.” His first attempt failed to damage the glass at all. On  his second attempt the glass still didn’t break but instead actually  popped out of the window frame, and he fell over 300 feet to his death
2003: Timothy Treadwell, an American  environmentalist who had lived in the wilderness among bears for  thirteen summers in a remote region in Alaska, and his girlfriend Amie  Huguenard were killed and partially consumed by a bear. An audio  recording of their deaths was captured on a video camera which had been  turned on at the beginning of the incident. Werner Herzog‘s documentary  film, Grizzly Man, discusses Treadwell and his death.

2008: Gerald Mellin, a U.K. businessman,  committed suicide by tying one end of a rope around his neck and the  other to a tree. He then hopped into his Aston Martin DB7 and drove down  a main road in Swansea until the rope decapitated him. He supposedly  did this as an act of revenge against his ex-wife for leaving him

 
 
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