Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
For professional football players, the most common cause of death is vehicle crashes. For college players, the most common cause of death is in-game and practice injuries. Each player is listed with the team to which he was assigned at the time of his death, rather than the team with which he spent most of his career.
A former Playboy model killed herself and her 7-year-old son after jumping from a hotel in Midtown New York City on Friday morning. The New York Post reports that 47-year-old Stephanie Adams ...
Carpenter was sentenced to die in the gas chamber and remains on death row in San Quentin State Prison. [ 10 ] Following his conviction for the Marin County murders, Carpenter was tried and convicted by a Santa Cruz jury for the murder and attempted rape of Ellen Hansen, the rape and murder of Heather Scaggs, and the attempted murder of Hansen ...
Body camera footage from what officials have called "an attack" that took place inside a New York state correctional facility resulting in the death of an inmate was released by the New York State ...
Sssssss [i] is a 1973 American body horror film directed by Bernard L. Kowalski and starring Strother Martin, Dirk Benedict, and Heather Menzies. [4] Its plot follows a college student who becomes a laboratory assistant to a herpetologist who is covertly developing a serum that can transform human beings into snakes.
As Chicago woman Heather Mack pleads guilty over the killing of her socialite mother Sheila von Weise-Mack at a 5-star Bali resort in 2014, America remains horrified by the case involving a Bonnie ...
Pahler's body was discovered after Casey confessed his role in the crime to a clergyman. [5] The clergyman notified police, and Casey led authorities to Pahler's partially mummified remains. All three were taken into custody and charged "with seven counts, including murder, conspiracy to commit murder, conspiracy to commit rape, and kidnapping."
bestgore.com (stylized as BestGore.com and abbreviated BG) [2] was a Canadian shock site active from 2008 to 2020 and owned by Mark Marek, [3] which provided highly violent real-life news, photos and videos, with authored opinion and user comments. The site received media attention in 2012, following the hosting of a video depicting the murder ...