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Strange Deaths

Record shows death by frying pan

A manuscript unearthed in Cumbria's archives has painted a vivid picture of murder, mayhem and misadventure in one 17th Century parish.

Deadly duels fought with frying pans, and drunken brawls waged with beer jugs claimed lives in the west county parish of Lamplugh between 1656 and 1663.

The record was uncovered by staff at the Cumbria Record Office and Local Studies Library, in Whitehaven.

It is being used to promote the national Archive Awareness Campaign.

The record also reveals how three women were drowned after being accused of being witches, and four people were scared to death by fairies.

Other peculiar deaths listed in the document include death by gluttony at a party and being attacked by the parson's bull.

But not all residents suffered such surprising ends - 57 residents died of traditional old age.

Evil witchcraft

Anne Rowe, county archivist of the Cumbria Archive Service, said: "It's great to unearth a document like this in our collection and gives people a chance to discover a more quirky side to history.

"I'm not sure whether to attribute this list to our ancestors' superstitions or just their sense of humour!

"These were insecure social times and many folk in the 17th Century would have been scared of fairies with many a natural death being put down to the 'evil witchcraft' of a harmless old widow."

Throughout autumn there are hundreds of events talking place in archives across the UK to promote the nation's collections.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/cumbria/6157611.stm

maximus otter


edited by TheQuixote: removed hotlinked image and merged with the Strange Deaths thread
 
Looks like obesity, binge drinking and domestic violence are not just symptoms of this irreligious materialistic modern society.

Who wouldda thunk it?
 
Don't know what to make of this one. I had no idea pigs would attack a living creature, even a small one?

Delhi boy eaten by herd of pigs
A three-year-old boy has been eaten alive by a neighbour's herd of pigs on the outskirts of the Indian capital, Delhi, police say.
The boy, Ajay, strayed from the family home as his parents and other family members were having lunch.

When his mother went to look for him, she found the pigs chewing something and spotted bits of her son's clothing.

She threw stones at the animals but they turned on her. Her screams alerted neighbours who came to her rescue.

'Playing'

Relatives in the village of Samaipur Badli in north-west Delhi told police the boy had been carrying bread, which might have led the animals to attack him.

A senior police official, Manish Aggarwal, said a local man who owned the pigs had been detained for causing death due to negligence.

"Three children were playing outside their house when the incident took place," Mr Aggarwal told the BBC.

"The victim, Ajay, strayed from the area but his parents or relatives were not there to save him since they were having lunch inside their house."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/6195860.stm
 
If they're hungry enough then, yes. Pigs will eat almost anything :(
 
http://mdn.mainichi-msn.co.jp/national/news/20061204p2a00m0na011000c.html

Man arrested for fatal hit-and-run of police officer sleeping on road
NAGANO -- A 25-year-old man was arrested for fatally hitting a police officer earlier this year who was apparently sleeping on a road after a party, police said on Monday.
Manabu Tsukada, from Suzaka, Nagano Prefecture, stands accused of professional negligence resulting in death and of carrying out a hit and run. He reportedly has denied the allegations.
Tsukada allegedly hit a 47-year-old police officer on a road in Nagano on the night of May 9 and fled the scene.
The police officer was apparently sleeping on the road after sitting for a promotion examination and wining and dining in the night.
 
An Italian couple have confessed to killing four neighbours in a dramatic twist to a murder mystery that has gripped Italy, prosecutors say.
Raffaella Castagna, her two-year-old son, mother and a friend were found on 11 December with their throats slit.

Italian papers blamed Ms Castagna's Tunisian husband, recently released from jail, but had to eat their words when he proved he was abroad.

Now prosecutors believe the cause of the massacre was a feud over noise.

Olindo Romano and Rosa Bazzi - the couple arrested in the case - had complained in the past to their neighbours about noise levels, Italian media said.

It was reported that the couples, who lived in neighbouring flats in a block in Erba, northern Italy, had come to blows on 31 December 2005, after which Ms Castagna proceeded to sue her neighbours.


The apartment was gutted by fire after the killings
Investigators said on Thursday that Mr Romano and Ms Bazzi - an apparently respectable middle-aged couple - had confessed to settling the dispute in the most violent way.

The bodies were found in Ms Castagna's apartment, which had been set on fire.

During a 10-hour interrogation, investigators said, Ms Bazzi said she had killed two-year-old Youssef because he was crying.

Husband cleared

Following the deaths several Italian newspapers issued rare front-page apologies after accusing Ms Castagna's husband, Azouz Marzouk, of the crime.

He had been released from prison under a mass pardon shortly before, but was on a trip to his Tunisian homeland at the time of the killings.

Papers speculated the attacks may have been related to his drug-dealing past, before that theory was apparently scotched by the neighbours' confession.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6255433.stm
 
Boy, 9, dies in blanket accident

A nine-year-old boy has died while playing with a blanket at his home, in what police said was a tragic accident.

Peter Handsaker died after suffering a heart attack at his home in Dairy Close, in Tipton, in the Black Country, on Monday evening.

Police said he became caught up in a blanket and choked. He then suffered a heart attack and died later in hospital, ambulance staff said.

His family have paid tribute to him as a "lively and fun loving" boy.

The accident happened as the boy played with his brothers in the house, police said.

'Much loved'

A statement released by his family said: "Peter's untimely death is a desperate tragedy, which has devastated all his family and friends.

"It was a tragic accident while he was playing in the house with his brothers.

"Peter was a typically lively and boisterous, fun-loving nine-year-old boy who was full of life. He was a very much-loved member of the family."

Police said the death was not being treated as suspicious.

A post-mortem examination was due to take place on Wednesday.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/west ... 315083.stm
 
Death caused by low-flying glider

The death of a photographer at a Leicestershire gliding competition was caused by aircraft flying "too low", an official report has found.
Neil Lawson, aged 42 and from Basingstoke, Hampshire, was standing on top of a car taking photos when he was hit by a glider and fatally injured.

The collision happened at the Junior World Gliding Championships at Husbands Bosworth, Leics, in August 2005.

The report was carried out by the Air Accidents Investigation Branch.

The report concluded that the root cause of Mr Lawson's death was "the practice of flying too low, outside the confines of the airfield and resorting to pop-up manoeuvres to clear obstacles".

It continued to state: "This racing tactic, which was employed by many competitors, was unnecessary and it deprived them of a good view of obstacles ahead."

Struck by wing

The unnamed 24-year-old pilot of the glider which collided with Mr Lawson, had clocked up 692 hours of flying and told investigators the late afternoon sunlight impaired his sight.

According to the report, the pilot recalled "easing back on the control stick slightly as he approached the hedge" and "looked out to his right to see when he was over the photographers as they disappeared from sight below the nose of the aircraft".

But he failed to see Mr Lawson standing on a car and the wing of the glider struck him.

The glider crash-landed in a field and the pilot escaped uninjured.

Mr Lawson was seen by paramedics but the on-scene air ambulance's take-off was impeded by other low-flying gliders who, unaware of the accident, continued to race to the finish line, the report stated.

Mr Lawson was then pronounced dead on arrival at hospital in Nottingham.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/leic ... 345731.stm
 
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/6374903.stm

Tandoor killer's sentence upheld

The high court in India's capital Delhi has upheld the death sentence for a former politician who shot his wife and burned her body in a restaurant oven.
Police retrieved charred body parts from the oven of the Delhi restaurant. The crime, which took place in July 1995, shocked India.

In 2003, a lower court convicted Sushil Sharma of murdering Naina Sahni, whom he suspected of infidelity,

It is expected that he will now take his appeal to the Supreme Court.


The two high court judges said he had shown no remorse.

"He has shown no sign of repentance. He has shocked the judicial conscience by showing no respect for the body," the judges said while rejecting his appeal.

During the trial, the court was told that Sharma shot his wife after suspecting her of having an affair and then cut the body up into pieces.

He took the body to the upmarket Baghiya restaurant and put it into the clay oven, or tandoor.

Police raided the restaurant after a tip-off.

Sharma, who headed the youth wing of the Congress party, was arrested in the southern city of Bangalore a few days after the murder.

Death sentences are awarded in the "rarest of rare" cases in India and they are rarely carried out.
 
This sad little tale offers a new dimension to a performer dying on stage :

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/6382919.stm

Colombia clowns killed on stage

Two circus clowns have been shot dead during a performance in the eastern Colombian city of Cucuta, police say.
The attacker jumped into the arena and fired before fleeing, police chief Jose Humberto Henao told Efe news agency.

Local reports say the audience of about 20 people, mostly children, thought the shooting was part of the show before realising both men had been killed.

Last year, a prominent circus clown, known as Pepe, was also shot dead by a unknown assailant in Cucuta.

The motive for the latest killing remains unclear, police said. Local media reports suggest two attackers may have been involved.

One clown was shot in the head as he performed on stage, about an hour into the Circo del Sol's evening show.

The second, named as 18-year-old Franklin Leal, from Cucuta, was then shot as he stood by the ticket booth, according to the newspaper La Opinion.

The travelling circus had set up in a suburb of Cucuta, capital of Norte de Santander province near the Venezuelan border, about 10 days earlier, the paper says.
 
11 die after ban on killer kites lifted for festival
ASIF SHAHZAD
IN LAHORE
AT LEAST 11 people died and more than 100 were injured at an annual spring festival in eastern Pakistan, celebrated with the flying of thousands of colourful kites.

The deaths and injuries were caused by stray bullets, sharp kite-strings, electrocution and people falling off rooftops at the conclusion of the two-day Basant festival on Sunday, said Ruqia Bano, a spokeswoman for the Lahore emergency services.

The festival - which traditionally runs for a month - is regularly marred by casualties caused by sharp kite strings or celebratory gunshots fired into the air.

Many kite flyers use strings made of wire or coated with ground glass to try to cross and cut a rival's string or damage the other kite, often after betting on the outcome. People then chase downed kites to collect them as trophies.

Authorities temporarily lifted a ban on kite flying imposed following a spate of deaths at the festival last year. Lahore's mayor, Mian Amier Mahmood, said the two-day permission to fly kites ended on Sunday and the ban had been re-imposed.

Condemning the lifting of the ban, Qazi Hussain Ahmad, leader of the Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal Islamic religious parties alliance, issued a statement saying: "Extravagant rulers have allowed the bloodbath of innocent citizens for their own merry- making."

Kite flying was banned as un-Islamic by the Taleban in neighbouring Afghanistan during the time the group controlled the country.

But one local politician responsible for lifting the ban justified it on the basis of the business the festival brings to the city. "This festival generates an economic activity of 1.75 billion rupees (£20 million) a year for the people of the walled city in Lahore," said Suleman Ghani.

Police arrested more than 700 people for using sharpened kite strings - which had been banned this year - or firing guns, and seized 282 illegally held weapons, said Aftab Cheema, a senior Lahore police officer.

Five of those who died on Sunday were hit by stray bullets, including a six-year-old boy who was struck in the head near his home in the city's Mazang area, Ms Bano said.

A 16-year-old girl and a boy, 12, died after their throats were slashed by metal kite strings in separate incidents. Two people were electrocuted while they tried to recover kites tangled in overhead power cables.

A 13-year-old boy fell to his death from the roof of his home as he tried to catch a stray kite, and a 35-year-old woman fell off the roof of her home trying to stop her son from running after another.


Basant - which means yellow in Hindi - symbolises the yellow mustard flowers that usually blossom in Pakistan at this time of the year. The festival is celebrated throughout the subcontinent and marks the transition from winter to spring.

http://news.scotsman.com/international.cfm?id=307652007
 
This is from 1997, but I didn't find a thread mention on the author's name...

LINK
Mystery writer's death as grisly as his fiction
January 19, 1997
Elisabeth Sherwin

Was the recent death of mystery writer Eugene Izzi suicide or murder?

His body was found on Dec. 7 , hanging from the 14th floor window of his Chicago office. He was wearing a bulletproof vest, carried a set of brass knuckles and a disabling chemical spray and had a .38-caliber revolver in his office. His body was found on a Saturday morning, dangling over one of the city's busiest streets, Michigan Avenue. The rope led from Izzi's neck inside the building to the leg of his office desk.

Chicago police investigators were perplexed. Was it a homicide meant to look like a suicide or a suicide meant to look like murder? There were suggestions that Izzi, 43, was trying to direct the investigation from the grave, was trying to make his suicide look like murder.

Investigators found transcripts and notes describing threats Izzi had received shortly before his death. Local newspapers reported that Izzi told a retired Chicago cop about threats from an Indiana militia group. Izzi claimed to have infiltrated the group while researching material for a book and had angered some of its members. Izzi apparently took the threats seriously and moved his wife and two sons out of their home to a safe location. Izzi had taken to sleeping in his office with a gun nearby.

But was all this about the Indiana militia just a story? Maybe, maybe not.

Investigators also found an unpublished novel bearing striking similarities to the author's own final chapter in three computer disks stuck in his pants pocket. The manuscript describes a Chicago mystery writer attacked in his downtown office by militia members who loop a noose around his neck, tie the rope to the metal desk and throw him from the 14th floor.

But in the manuscript, the victim survives the murder attempt, hoists himself back up the rope, grabs the gun and kills the bad guys.


Police wondered whether Izzi killed himself accidentally while acting out the hanging to give his novel more realistic details. Chilling thought. The other idea is this: Izzi tried to meld fiction with reality by committing suicide. It's this latter theory that police have decided fits.

Last week the Cook County medical examiner's office issued a statement saying Izzi's death was suicide. The author, a steelworker before turning to fiction writing, had been on antidepressants and was seeing a psychiatrist. Dr. Mitra Kalekar of the medical examiner's office said it was a review of Izzi's novel-in-progress that led her to believe his death was suicide.

"The manuscript was like a suicide note," she said. "It was like a script of his own suicide."

No matter how he died, mystery fans are left without an exciting, prolific crime writer. "His works are graphic, violent, use rough language, and are not very complimentary to women," according to an Evanston, Ill., librarian who compiled a list of Chicago crime and mystery writers.

I recently read "Prime Roll," a 1990 Izzi novel that moves between Chicago and Atlantic City. It's about compulsive gamblers, mob figures, and macho men trying to out-hustle each other. Frankly, I found the plot confusing. But I still enjoyed the book. I tried to figure out how Izzi did his research. He obviously spent a lot of time in casinos and a lot of time playing 21 and shooting craps. But his characters were flat and the novel wandered.

Still, I understand Izzi was a fascinating person.

"No author, no matter who it might be from Dick Francis to Tony Hillerman, was as charismatic with fans," said Judy Duhl, owner of Scotland Yard Books in upscale Winnetka outside Chicago where Izzi had appeared at several readings.

His works include "Bad Guys," (1988), "The Booster," (1989), "Eighth Victim," (1988) "Invasions," (1990), "King of The Hustlers," (1989), "Tony's Justice," (1993) and "Tribal Secrets," (1992).

Izzi grew up in a gritty steel-mill neighborhood on Chicago South's Side. Friends said his father was a thief. Izzi himself was a high school dropout who taught himself to "write from the gut."

For those who would like to know more about Chicago writers, there are several books on the subject. "Murder and Mystery in Chicago," edited by Carol-Lynn Waugh, Martin Greenburg, and Frank McSherry is an anthology of short mystery stories set in the Windy City. Authors represented include Sara Paretsky, Robert Bloch, and Frederic Brown.

And then there's "A Mystery Reader's Walking Guide: Chicago" by Alzina Stone Dale. Dale has written mystery reader's guides to England, London, and New York, but as a native Chicagoan is at her best in this volume as she captures the history, mystery and flavor of the city and describes great walks.

Unfortunately, future editions will likely include a walk by Izzi's Michigan Avenue office so tourists can see exactly where he hungx himself. But maybe that's what Izzi wanted?
 
PARTY-GOER IMPALED BY RAILING SPIKE
06/03/2007

A SINGER died after impaling his leg on a spiked iron railing while taking a short cut to a party.

John Macisaac, 24, managed to pull himself free and tried to limp to nearby flats to get help.

But he bled to death in the street. His body was found by a jogger early the next morning.

A resident said: "There was a sea of blood on the pavement and on the stairs to one of the flats.

"He looks to have tried getting to one of the flats for help but couldn't get there in time because he had lost so much blood.

"It's a terrible thing to happen and a horrific sight for anyone."

John was going to a friend's birthday party at one of the flats when he clambered over the railings and impaled his thigh.

Police cordoned off the street in Southampton, on Saturday and removed the spike for tests.

John, of Blackfield, was the lead singer of punk rock band Mach Schau.

A postmortem examination was to be carried out yesterday.
http://tinyurl.com/yugdln

(Macisaac is a stange name - sounds sort of Scottish Jewish. Is it common?)
 
This is strange in that it could be murder, suicide or natural causes.
But it also might link in with criminal conspiracies.
A suspicious death, say police, as the rumours of murder or accident abound

· Questions over Woolmer's death at World Cup
· Allegation of link with match-fixing mafia

Ed Pilkington in Kingston, Jamaica, Andrew Culf, and Declan Walsh in Islamabad
Thursday March 22, 2007
The Guardian

Jamaican detectives investigating the death of former England cricketer Bob Woolmer will resume their questioning of hotel staff and players today after announcing that they are treating his death as "suspicious".
Former Scotland Yard chief superintendent Mark Shield, who is leading the investigation, said police were trying to piece together the final hours of the Pakistani coach, who was found collapsed in his hotel room on Sunday morning.

"We're going through a process of speaking to people, including members of the team," he told Jamaican Radio.

The announcement on Tuesday night that Woolmer's death was being investigated as suspicious set off a storm of speculation around the world, with rumours of match fixing, of betting syndicates and of murder destroying any semblance of normality at the cricketing World Cup.
Detectives spent yesterday searching his 12th-floor room at the Jamaica Pegasus hotel and removing items for forensic tests. The white front door of room 374 was covered in black marks from fingerprint analysis.

Earlier Mr Shields, deputy commissioner of the Jamaican force, said initial results from forensic tests on Woolmer's body had led him to launch a full investigation.

"There is now sufficient information to continue a full investigation into the circumstances surrounding the death, which we are now treating as suspicious."

Asked whether that meant a murder inquiry, he replied: "No, we are not saying that," adding with studied evasion: "It's the old adage - we have to keep an open mind."

The ambiguity sent local and international media into a frenzy. Some of the most lurid accounts came from the Asian press, with suggestions that there was evidence of a struggle in the bathroom. Radio Jamaica reported that it had been "very reliably" told that the cause of death had been identified as strangulation. Pervez Mir, the Pakistan cricket team spokesman, would not comment on the rumours. He said he had seen Woolmer's body, but saw no signs of an attack. Mr Mir said the body had been moved from the toilet to the bedroom, but declined to say by whom: "That is a matter for the police."

Earlier, one of the Pakistani team officials told reporters there had been blood and vomit in Woolmer's room. The news that further toxicology results were expected sparked speculation that poison had been found.

The former Pakistani fast bowler Safraz Nawaz, went furthest when he told Associated Press: "Woolmer's death has some connection with the match-fixing mafia." If there is any truth in Nawaz's contention that Woolmer was murdered because he was about to expose match fixing, it would be the biggest scandal to hit international cricket. It has already been tarnished by revelations that in 1996 the captain of the South African team, Hansie Cronje, took $350,000 from a bookmaker to lose matches. Cronje, who was captain while Woolmer coached South Africa, died in a plane crash in 2002.

The Pakistan team's first shock came on Saturday when the team fell to a humiliating defeat at the hands of World Cup debutantes Ireland, which threw them out of the competition. Woolmer handled that defeat with typical dignity, saying: "I think you can say that March 17 2007, will be a historic day for world cricket."

But March 18 2007 may become a far more significant moment for the international sport. Initial theories around Woolmer's death focused on the diabetes he suffered from, as well as breathing difficulties he had been said to complain about. His family mentioned stress or a heart attack as possible causes.

Woolmer's wife, Gill, interviewed on Indian television, said her husband had not been involved in match-fixing and they had never been threatened. She said he had emailed her on the morning of his death after the defeat to Ireland: "He did mention that he was really depressed and could not believe how this could have happened." Imran Khan, the cricket legend turned politician, yesterday also discounted murder theories. "Why would anyone want to kill Woolmer? That makes no sense. I don't believe in any conspiracy," he told the Guardian.

Woolmer, 58, first made his for Kent before playing for England in 1975. He found greater success as a coach, but controversy was never far behind. Two years into his appointment as Pakistani coach he was embroiled in the ugly dispute over ball tampering, with the Pakistanis accused of cheating. On Woolmer's watch, two players Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Asif were banned for long periods after testing positive to the drug nandrolone. The ban was later dropped on appeal.

Friends talk of stress and plots

Medical problems

Even when he played for England, Bob Woolmer hardly cut a svelte figure. And by the age of 58 he appeared out of condition and suffered from type two diabetes. Pakistan Cricket Board chairman Naseem Ashraf said Woolmer had complained of breathing difficulties and sometimes wore an oxygen mask to sleep. Although his coaching job was stressful, his wife, Gill, said he recently joked to a friend: "Don't worry about me, mate, I'm the last person to die of a heart attack." Mrs Woolmer told Indian TV channel NDTV there was no possibility he had succumbed to an overdose of prescription drugs or alcohol. The only medication he was taking were prescribed anti-inflammatory drugs, she said.

Cricketing concerns

Saturday's defeat to World Cup minnows Ireland meant an early exit from the World Cup for Pakistan, the latest in a disastrous series of events involving the team. In Multan, angry fans burnt effigies of Woolmer and captain Inzamam-ul-Haq, and shouted "Death to Bob Woolmer". His apartment was stoned and media coverage suggested the players' financial assets should be frozen. In his last posting on his website, Woolmer accused Pakistan's media of trying to "disrupt team spirit". His relationship with most of the team was said to be good, although there were tensions with former players, including Javed Miandad, as well as current stars fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar and captain Inzamam. Woolmer had come close to resignation over the forfeited Test match at the Oval in August 2006, when his team was accused by umpire Darrell Hair of ball-tampering. Two months later Shoaib and Mohammad Asif were sent home from the Champions Trophy after testing positive for the banned anabolic steroid nandrolone. Relations with Shoaib deteriorated further in January when the Pakistani media reported Woolmer had racially abused the bowler in South Africa. The coach threatened legal action.

The forthcoming books

Woolmer was writing two books - one on coaching, the other a sequel to his autobiography - his wife told NDTV: "I have the manuscripts with me, but I have not read them. I cannot tell you when they will published but they are in the final stages." Conspiracy theorists, led by former Pakistani bowler Sarfraz Nawaz believed one of the books would lift the lid on a new match-fixing scandal, and that Woolmer had been murdered by a betting syndicate on the subcontinent. Mrs Woolmer poured scorn on the idea of a murder plot: "Bob never spoke to me about match-fixing," she said.

http://sport.guardian.co.uk/cricketworl ... 08,00.html
 
Looking more like murder now...
'Broken bones' fuel Woolmer murder rumours
By Matthew Moore and Ben Fenton
Last Updated: 12:45pm GMT 22/03/2007

Jamaican police have ordered a second post mortem on Bob Woolmer, the Pakistan cricket coach, amid rumours that his death was more violent than first thought.

Several Caribbean newspapers reported that some of Mr Woolmer's bones had been broken, and that his throat had been bruised. Local police have described his death as "suspicious".

Gill, his widow, said today she thought it a "possibility" that her husband was murdered.

"Some of the cricketing fraternity, fans are extremely volatile and passionate about the game and what happens in the game, and also a lot of it in Asia, so I suppose there is always the possibility that it could be that," she told Sky News.

"It fills me with horror, I just can't believe that people could behave like that or that anyone would want to harm someone who has done such a great service to international cricket."

She insisted he was not taking any illegal drugs before his death, and rejected any suggestion that he may have committed suicide.

Mrs Woolmer also said she had been given "some indication" why the police considered the case suspicious, but refused to give more details.

The Jamaica Observer and the Jamaica Gleaner both reported today that Mr Woolmer's death had been violent. The Observer said he had marks on his throat and that bones in the lower part of his face were broken, while the Gleaner said there was a broken bone in his neck.

It quoted an unnamed "high-ranking" police officer as saying the case was being treated as murder.

Mr Woolmer, the former Kent and England all-rounder, was found dead on the floor of his hotel room in New Kingston on Sunday morning, hours after his team was knocked out of the World Cup by Ireland.

The former Pakistan pace bowler Sarfraz Nawaz claimed yesterday Mr Woolmer had been murdered by the "match-fixing mafia".

"The theory going around in West Indies police circles is that Woolmer might have been killed by those who wanted to silence him on the issue of match fixing," Mr Nawaz was reported as saying.

An initial autopsy on Mr Woolmer was inconclusive and further fluid and tissue samples were taken from the 58-year-old's body.

Yesterday afternoon, about a dozen forensic officers spent four hours examining Mr Woolmer's 12th floor hotel room. It is believed that there were pools of blood in the room and there were suspicions over vomit found high on the walls. Police refused to confirm or deny reports that marks had been found on Mr Woolmer's throat.

The forensic team left carrying several bags of evidence and a senior officer said the room was being treated as a "potential crime scene".

It is unclear how many Pakistan team members have been questioned but detectives indicated that the players and their management may not be free to leave Jamaica as planned on Saturday.

Mr Woolmer suffered from mild Type 2 diabetes and was taking anti-inflammatory drugs, probably for arthritis.
http://tinyurl.com/2ryhmv
 
More:
Although the hotel is still open, police officers have been accompanying anyone using the lifts and, yesterday, an armed kept visitors away from the fifth floor, where the Pakistan team is based.

Some members of the team gathered last night to pay tribute to Woolmer at an impromptu memorail service. Mushtaq Ahmed, his deputy as coach, said: "He was a part of our body, and you guys can imagine, if you lose something from your body how do you feel? He was our heart."

The Gleaner reported today that some members of the team were interviewed by police last night. The team had been due to fly to Montego Bay for a couple of days' rest before heading back to Pakistan, but it is now not clear when they will be allowed to leave.

Early today, an international photographic news agency ran pictures of Woolmer's body in a drawer in a morgue in Kingston. The body was wrapped in a blue sheet inside an unzipped yellow body bag. A cut across the bridge of his nose was clearly visible, as was a scrape across his right cheek.

Mrs Woolmer said she hoped that the second pathologist's report would soon be completed and the cause of her husband's death established. "As soon as we know that the investigation will be wound down and they will be able to send his body back to South Africa," she said.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/ ... 553610.ece
 
Pakistan's coach 'was strangled'

Pakistan's cricket coach Bob Woolmer was murdered in his hotel room on Sunday after the team's World Cup shock defeat to Ireland, Jamaican police say.
A post-mortem examination established that the former England player had died as a result of "manual strangulation", police commissioner Lucius Thomas said.

"In these circumstances, the matter of Mr Woolmer's death is now being treated as murder," he told a news conference.

Police say Mr Woolmer may have known his killer or killers.

Mr Woolmer, 58, was found unconscious by staff at the Pegasus Hotel in Kingston on Sunday morning.

World Cup to continue
Obituary: Bob Woolmer

Police said there were no signs of forced entry into his room and none of his possessions had been taken. Authorities are studying CCTV footage from the hotel.

The deputy commissioner of the Jamaican police, Mark Shields, said this might now be a hunt for more than one killer, and urged the perpetrators to hand themselves in.

"Bob was a large man. It would have taken some significant force to subdue him," he said, adding that police were ruling nothing out and had "lots of lines of inquiry".

"I have to say at this stage that it looks as if it may be somebody who's somehow linked to him, because clearly he let somebody into his hotel room and it may be that he knew who that person was," Mr Shields told the BBC.

Mr Shields also "unequivocally dismissed" Indian television reports that arrests had been made.

"That's nonsense, as far as I'm concerned. There's actually no truth in that," he said.

The BBC's Andy Gallacher in Kingston says that Bob Woolmer's murder has stunned the cricketing world and left the World Cup in disarray.

Speculation that this may be connected to gambling cartels is only adding to the confusion surrounding his tragic death, our correspondent says.

'Resolute and strong'

On Thursday, Jamaican police questioned members of Pakistan's cricket squad over the death.

After being interviewed for about an hour and fingerprinted, the team left for the resort of Montego Bay.

They were due to return to Pakistan on Saturday but our correspondent says it is not known if they will be allowed to leave as planned.

Pakistan team spokesman Pervez Jamil Mir said the players were "in a state of shock" over the news that Mr Woolmer had been killed.

However, the sport's governing body, the International Cricket Council (ICC), said the competition would continue as planned to "demonstrate that cricket cannot be put off by a cowardly criminal act".

ICC chief executive Malcolm Speed said the entire cricket community was shocked by the death of the former England Test batsman and South Africa coach.

He said: "Everyone connected with this event will assist the police in any way possible to ensure the truth emerges."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/6482981.stm
 
From The Times:
It has been suggested that a book Mr Woolmer had just finished writing about cricket may have made him a target. But Professor Tim Noakes, a sport science expert at the University of Cape Town who co-wrote the manuscript, today said it "asbolutely no connection to cricketing scandal".

"It will be published and it will be Bob's legacy but it makes absolutely no reference whatsoever to any scandal in cricket," Professor Noakes told the BBC, describing the book as a comprehensive study of the game and its coaching techniques.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/ ... 556946.ece
 
42 year old commits suicide online

42 year old commits suicide online

A father-of-two hanged himself live over the internet in Britain's first 'cyber suicide'.

Kevin Whitrick, 42, took his life after being goaded by dozens of chatroom users from across the world who initially believed he was play acting.

But as they watched in horror, Mr Whitrick climbed onto a chair, smashed through a ceiling and then hanged himself with a piece of rope. Link

[Emp edit: Fixing big link]
 
Woolmer quit as coach hours before his murder

BOB WOOLMER sent an e-mail resigning as Pakistan’s cricket coach just hours before he was strangled in a Jamaican hotel, write Jonathan Calvert and Richard Luscombe.

The 58-year-old was planning to retire from cricket so he could spend his remaining days with his family in Cape Town.

His resignation was e-mailed from his laptop to Nasim Ashraf, chairman of the Pakistan cricket board. He wrote: “I would like to praise my association with the Pakistan team but now I would like to announce my retirement after the World Cup to live the rest of my life in Cape Town.”

His death came just hours after the team had been humiliatingly bundled out of the World Cup by Ireland, the rank outsiders.

The Pakistan squad boarded their plane last night to leave Jamaica after last-minute questioning of three of their members by police in Montego Bay.

A Pakistani player told reporters that two of the men had been asked by police why they changed hotel rooms shortly after Woolmer was murdered.

The two men questioned about their rooms are understood to have been Inzamam ul-Haq, the captain, and Talat Ali, the team manager. Mushtaq Ahmed, the stand-in coach, was asked separately about a cut on his face.

Mark Shields, deputy commissioner of the Jamaica Constabulary, would not confirm the line of questioning, but said: “This is unique in that many witnesses are leaving the country and it is important that we clear up any ambiguity before they depart.”

He added: “I’m satisfied there is no reason why they shouldn’t leave the country.”

Asked whether he was sure no members of the squad were under suspicion of Woolmer’s killing, Mushtaq replied: “Inshallah [God willing], I’m 110% sure.”

Pakistani sources suggested Woolmer’s resignation e-mail was sent from his laptop to Ashraf at 6am last Sunday, less than five hours before his body was found in his room by a hotel maid.

He had earlier written to his wife Gill saying he was depressed by the defeat to Ireland but added that it was “in the past and one had to move on”.

Ashraf said that in the e-mail Woolmer “expressed his great disappointment over the stunning defeat [by Ireland]. But he still believes the boys tried their best and fought till the last to make the most of the match”.

Police may review video footage of the Ireland game after allegations that Woolmer’s death could be linked to match-fixing.

The squad were due to fly to London via Kingston, with most of the team then travelling on to Pakistan.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/ ... 563876.ece
This story gets stranger and stranger.
 
British tourists trampled to death in safari stampede
By Cahal Milmo
Published: 27 March 2007

A mother and her daughter were killed when an elephant trampled them during a safari in a game reserve in western Zimbabwe.

The woman's husband was injured in the accident, which occurred after the group of holidaymakers had left their vehicles to look closer at a male bull elephant while on a two-night visit to Hwange national park.

Managers at the safari camp where the family were staying said last night that the elephant had been in musth, the breeding period when bulls can become very aggressive, and armed guides had not had time to fire directly at the charging animal. The injured man was released after hospital treatment.

Gavin Rennie, of the Hide camp in the heart of Hwange, which is renowned for its diversity of big game, said: "It happened extremely quickly.

"They were with an experienced, professional guide who fired a warning shot, but there was no time to fire a second as the elephant charged. The two who died were trampled under the animal as the rest of the group tried to get away."

Police in Hwange, in the far west of Zimbabwe close to the Botswanan border, said they were investigating if there had been any negligence on the part of the guides during the incident, which took place on Saturday afternoon. The Foreign Office said the names of the dead Britons were being withheld at the request of their relatives.

Elephants are the second most dangerous animal in Zimbabwe for humans, after crocodiles. Charging elephants killed 12 people in the country in 2005. Last year, Gianpaolo Tarabini, husband of the Italian fashion designer Anna Molinari, was killed by two elephants while on a hunting expedition in Zimbabwe.

In October last year, a British tourist on his honeymoon was trampled in Kenya. Patrick Smith, 34, from London, had been married for a week when he was killed in front of his wife.

The latest tragedy happened while the Britons were on a safari drive in a four-wheel-drive vehicle. After spotting a lone elephant, they left the vehicle to reach close quarters on foot.

The Hide is one of Zimbabwe's leading safari camps, charging guests £145 a night for accommodation and guided tours. The Britons were on the second day of their stay and had already completed a walking tour in the park, which covers 14,600 sq km (5,640 sq miles), before setting out.

Mr Rennie said: "It is standard procedure that when there is a fully-qualified guide, our guests can get out of the vehicle and walk towards the animal of interest. The group got closer and it was then that it was noticed the elephant was in musth.

"The guide signalled for everyone to return to the vehicle and that movement caused the elephant to charge. A warning shot was let off but there was no second shot and the guide was knocked over by the elephant as it hit the two people. It is a dreadful tragedy."

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/afr ... 396003.ece
 
The strangest thing about that story, in a way, is that British tourists are still willing to holiday in Zimbabwe, with all that's going on there. Does the Foreign Office not have guidelines against travelling to these kinds of places? I'm equally surprised that the Zimbabwean government welcomes Britons into the country, for that matter, although I suppose when inflation is 1400% and rising, you'll take all the Dollars you can get.

By the way, don't get me wrong - I'm not tryng to make any trite comments about how this tragedy could have been averted - elephants are no respecters of national boundaries, and this sort of thing could happen in Botswana, Kenya, anywhere.
 
Briton's body found in Japan bath

The apartment block where the body was found has been sealed off
A woman found buried in sand in a bathtub in Japan has been named by police as 22-year-old missing Briton Lindsey Ann Hawker.
Colleagues identified the body of the English language teacher, found on the balcony of a fourth-floor flat in Ichikawa, east of Tokyo.

The cause of death is not yet known but there were bruises on the victim's face, the BBC's Chris Hogg said.

Police are hunting a man who fled the apartment in Chiba prefecture.

The BBC's correspondent said the teacher, from the Midlands, was reported missing by her flatmates on Monday afternoon after she disappeared from her home on Sunday.

Local media reported that Ms Hawker had only been in Japan for a couple of months and was a popular teacher, he added.

They said she went to the apartment each Saturday to give English lessons to 28-year-old Tatsuya Ichihachi.

She had left details of the address at home before she disappeared and police are now trying to locate Mr Ichihachi.

A handbag and a passport thought to belong to the victim were found near the apartment.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/6498019.stm
 
Window cleaner drowned in bucket

A window cleaner drowned in his bucket of water after suddenly collapsing while he worked, an inquest heard.
Mark Fairhurst, 35, of Wigan, Greater Manchester, was found with his head submerged in water by his customer, Elizabeth Bebe, in June 2006.

Bolton Coroner's Court heard that a heart condition caused the collapse but the cause of death was drowning because he was unable to save himself.

The jury returned a unanimous verdict of accidental death.

The father-of-one, of Fowler Close, Scholes, was working at the home of Miss Bebe in Whelley, near Wigan.

She told the inquest: "I went outside to hang some washing at the back when I saw a ladder propped up against the wall.

"I then saw Mark lying on the ground motionless, with his arms tucked in and his head tilted to the right inside the bucket.

"It looked like he had been in that position for some time. I went to call a neighbour who then called the ambulance and the police."

No foul play

Miss Bebe told the jury she thought Mr Fairhurst may have fallen while on the ground, rather than from his ladder.

The hearing also heard that the window cleaner had complained about heart palpitations earlier in the year but had not told his doctor.

Pathologist Dr Charles Wilson told the jury he had been informed that Mr Fairhurst had been assaulted in August 2005 which had led to memory problems.

He said he could not rule out the incident being linked to his blackout - but was satisfied there was no foul play.

Coroner Jennifer Leeming expressed her condolences to the family of Mr Fairhurst at the hearing on Thursday.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/manc ... 667043.stm
 
http://edinburghnews.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=788492007

Mother dies after she stubs toe in the street

A MOTHER-of-two has died after she stubbed her toe on an uneven pavement and the wound became infected.

Kirsty Keenan, 35, cut her toe when she tripped in the street near her home in Leith. She died just over a month later at the Western General Hospital after developing septicaemia.

Her partner, James Raeburn, 31, found her unconscious at their home in Portland Street, Leith, after collecting their children, Terrilea, 11, and three-year-old James, from school.

The day before - four days after she had tripped in nearby Madeira Street - she had called doctors to the house after experiencing searing pains in her legs.

But no-one connected the pain to her stubbed toe and the doctor recommended painkillers.

Surgeons amputated both her legs in an effort to save her, but she died as a result of a previously undetected heart condition.

Mr Raeburn, Ms Keenan's partner of 13 years, said: "It all just happened so suddenly and we can't believe she's gone.

"She had an absolute heart of gold, nothing was too much to ask of her, and she got on with everyone. We are so proud the way she fought for a month and three days."


TORMENT: James Raeburn with his children Terrilea, 11, and James, three. Picture: IAN GEORGESON
Ms Keenan - who worked as a cleaner at Fort Primary School - had been taking a friend's three-week-old child for a walk when she tripped. She experienced some pain in her foot in the days immediately after, but had thought nothing of it until the severe pains shot up her leg.

Mr Raeburn recalled finding her unconscious in bed the day after the doctor called.

"She was facing the wrong way and when I pulled the covers back I saw her legs were blue and her mouth looked unusual, as if she'd been poisoned or something," he said.

"Me and my children were absolutely hysterical. She wouldn't respond and we had no idea what to do, they were begging her to wake up. We called an ambulance and when we all got to hospital they put Kirsty into an induced coma."

She died on May 12 with Mr Raeburn and their children at her bedside. "She could hear what we were saying and was able to make kissing signals towards us, but by the end she was hanging on.

"Because of a rare heart condition that we'd never known about, the valves in her heart burst and caused a bigger clot in her brain.

"I was told on the Friday night that her condition had worsened and spent the night there, then the next day I was begging her to please hang on so the kids could come and see her.

"She held on and held on and eventually they made it here.

"Terrilea spoke to her and said she knew her mum would look after her from heaven, then I had to just say to them to leave now because it was time for mummy to go.

"They then switched the machine off and the colour in her face just totally changed."

He added: "My kids have handled it so well, I'm really proud of them. My priority now is to get the kids checked out in case the heart condition is hereditary."
 
Train Kills Man Trying to Kill Woman

Sometimes karma hits fast:

Train Kills Man Trying to Kill Woman
Man trying to kill girlfriend by parking on tracks dies when car flips onto him; woman lives.

By CHRISTINA ALMEIDA Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES May 21, 2007 (AP)

A man trying to kill his girlfriend by stopping a car in front of an approaching train was himself killed Monday when the train hit the vehicle and launched it into him as he tried to flee, police said.

The girlfriend survived.

The man drove the car in front of a group of other vehicles stopped at a railroad crossing in the San Fernando Valley neighborhood of Sunland, Officer Mike Lopez said.

The driver, who was seen arguing with his girlfriend, parked the car on the tracks and jumped out, leaving her behind, Lopez said.

A northbound commuter train hit the rear of the car, hurling it into the man. The girlfriend was taken to the hospital, where she was in stable condition, Lopez said.

"She gets hit by a train and lives. He gets hit by his own car and he dies," Lopez said.

The train was heading from downtown to Lancaster in northern Los Angeles County at the time of the 12:08 p.m. crash, said Denise Tyrrell, a spokeswoman for Metrolink.

There were no injuries on the train, which carried 132 passengers and crew members, Tyrrell said. The train had superficial damage.

The train's speed wasn't immediately known. The limit in the area is 79 mph, Tyrrell said. At that speed, it would take one-third of a mile to stop, she said.

It is highly unusual for someone to survive being struck by a train, Tyrrell said.

"The train to your car is like your car to a soda pop can. It's just not going to be a fair fight," Tyrrell said.

Article link
 
No Charges Over 'Suicide' On Web

No charges over 'suicide' on web

Chatroom users who watched a man apparently commit suicide over the internet will not face charges, the Crown Prosecution Service has said.


Kevin Whitrick, 42, of Wellington, Shropshire, broadcast his death over the internet in March.

The father-of-two was found hanged after suffering from severe depression for several years.

The CPS said comments made by chatroom users at the time did not amount to a criminal offence.

A spokesman said in a statement: "This is a tragic case which resulted in the untimely death of Kevin Whitrick.

"We examined all the evidence passed to us by the police and have concluded that none of the comments made in the chatroom amounted to a criminal offence.

"As a result, there is insufficient evidence to prosecute any person for any criminal offence arising out of Mr Whitrick's death."

Story from BBC NEWS:

Published: 2007/05/26 15:42:38 GMT

© BBC MMVII
 
'Dettol Man' cleans himself to death

Dettol Man' cleans himself to death
Obsession with cleanliness kills Manchester recluse
By Lester Haines → More by this author
Published Tuesday 29th May 2007 11:21 GMT
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A coroner has recorded a verdict of death by misadventure on a reclusive Manchester man whose obsession with cleanliness led local children to dub him "Dettol Man".

Jacques Niemand, 42, of Didsbury, died of "an inadequate supply of oxygen to his vital organs" provoked by over-exposure to Dettol, the Telegraph reports. The inquest heard that he "habitually placed buckets of Dettol around his flat", while the rooms were "littered" with bottles of the liquid.
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Niemand's sister Ruth Bain explained that her brother had suffered from an "obsessive cleaning disorder" for some years, but didn't seek medical help "because he feared the prospect of being detained under the Mental Health Act". Accordingly, he hadn't seen his GP since 1992. Bain said: "He didn't want any help and was scared of receiving it."

Pathologist Dr Lorna McWilliam told the inquest it was "difficult to say whether [Niemand's] exposure to Dettol had been through ingestion or inhalation". She elaborated: "I cannot be sure his death arose through using an excessive amount at one time, but I suspect there must be an element of that."

Recording a verdict of misadventure, Manchester coroner Leonard Gorodkin described Niemand's demise as "a most unusual kind of death", admitting: "We do not know if death occurred quickly or over a period of time."

Gorodkin suggested the fatal dose might have arisen since Niemand "knew workmen were due to begin improvements to his flat on the day he died he may have wanted to make himself particularly clean". He did, however, disagree with Bain's suspicion that her brother had wanted to kill himself. He concluded: "If that had been the case the level of chlorate in his body would have been much higher."

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