Mother Knows Death starring Nicole and Jemmy and Maria qk.
Hi. Everyone welcome The Mother Knows Death. Let's get into this week's six shocking Stories. So, a twenty year old chick and her boyfriend were driving along when suddenly he hit a culvert on the side of the road. The car went flying, They hit a pole six feet in the air, they went through three trees, the car started rolling. I mean, photos of this accident are absolutely horrific. Yeah,
it really is. And this case actually so this woman had sent me this story and it was so good that I decided to add it into my book too. So we have half of the posts in the grocerroom showing the accident and what her surgeries looked like after, and then the rest of it is in the book, which Maria will get to right now. Yeah. So, obviously, because of this horrific nature of this crash, first responders thought they weren't going to find any survivors, but shockingly
they did so. Her boyfriend had been thrown one hundred and eighty feet from the car, split his head open, and broke his shoulder. She unfortunately got pinned in the car and because it was rolling the sun roof broke
and it trapped her arm and degloved it. So what is a degloving injury for people that aren't familiar, Well, just think of your skin being on your hand or really your entire body as being a glove on your hand, right, So the skin can just come right off of your hand or anywhere on your body, leaving behind the soft tissue, muscle and bone. So when you have a degloving injury, it's basically when the skin is just ripped right off
of your hand or anywhere. So, yeah, it could happen, and it could happen to your scalp just anywhere where you have skin. It could happen, all right. So, because of how crunched the car was and the way her arm was trapped, the first respounders were having a really difficult They were having a really hard time getting her out. So this seems like worst key scenario to me. They decided that they had to amputate her arm at the scene because otherwise they weren't going to be able to
get her out of the car. Yeah, I mean, unfortunately it happens sometimes that they have to do that because it's the only way to get a person out and it just seems like the most horrible thing that a person would have to go through. She was alert enough to tell them what her parents' name was and their phone numbers, so she was she knew what was happening, you know, and I think at that time, when you think that, oh, thank god, I've survived this, you don't
even really care at that point. So they had to send a surgeon in and do a field amputation is what it's called. So that's not that uncommon then, Like they have to do this enough that I wouldn't say
it's common, but they they have to do it. Yeah, I mean there's situations where people just get stuck in car accidents are probably the most common, but machinery and things like that, and if they can't cut off the piece and bring it with the person to the hospital that they're stuck in, then that, I mean, they don't take that decision lightly to do something like that, you know, do they I'm trying to just imagine being in a scenario like do they give you any type of local
anesthetic or it just like it just has to be done so quick. I'm assuming that they that there's ways to get around all of that. I mean, this isn't she was stuck there, so it wasn't like, Okay, this thing's about to fall on you right now, we have to get you out. I think they probably had some time to do something like that at the side. You know, they had ems and everything there, so they were probably able to do something at least a local anesthetic if
but maybe more. I'm not sure. All right, So after they cut her arm off, they took it with her to the hospital. I guess they decided at some point that they weren't able to reattach it, so she had to go through all of these procedures to get her arm formally amputated. What happens with her arm if they can't keep it and put it back on, they send it to austin pathology. That's what happens, so we get it in pathology. And that's something that is pretty common
to get limbs from people either. Definitely, legs are more common for gangreen for people with diabetes are the most common. But we definitely have gotten lots of legs and arms, especially when I was working in the city. People hit by a bus, people hit by a train, there are arms and legs cut off people with farming accidents or
a big one. So yeah, we get the limb in pathology and we look at it and we describe the injuries that we see, and that's basically just for documentation because a lot of these cases might I mean, this might go to court if it was a problem with the car or if there was another person involved in the accident. So you just want to have a really good description of where it was damaged and if there was. Sometimes there's broken bones in the arm too, as well as the end of the margin being all torn up,
so we describe that. So in this case, her arm was amputated, and so that's the case in the book of the picture of her arm, that there's grass and dirt attached to it. We just get, you know, I've gotten legs from train accidents that have like grease from the train tracks on it, things like that. So we just mentioned all those kinds of things in our report. And then we usually keep the limb in a refrigerator for like a month and then we dispose of it with the rest of the medical waste, so it gets
burned incinerated. It is interesting. Another thing I should bring up is that oftentimes people especially certain religions, people want to be buried with their body parts, So a funeral home will sometimes come pick up the arm and they would have to pay for storage until they died so they could be reunited with their body part. Oh so at funeral homes they'll just have like a like a
storage facility of random body parts. Yeah, I guess. I don't know if they do it at an Actually that was something that you're gonna have to ask a funeral director. But they might have like an off site storage unit. But yeah, that's something that people do. Wow, it's so
interesting to think about. Yeah, it is. I mean if you especially if you have a religion that they believe that your whole, you know, people that are against tattoos and piercings and things like that, that they want your body to be buried whole, then that's kind of a big deal for them. Yeah, I understand that. So afterwards, she was fitted for a prosthetic, but she decided that
she was better off without it. I mean, she kind of has an amazing recovery story with then what was it, two weeks after she got released from the hospital, she was able to tie her shoes. Oh yeah, No, she was able to very soon after she got released from the hospital. She was able to tie her shoes and do so. And in the gross room we have the video of her tying her shoes, which is just it's amazing because and then another thing she could do is
put her hair in a ponytail. I couldn't believe that I could barely do it myself right now, I know, right, It's it's so cool that she was. It really shows though, when you really want to do something like that instead of just sitting there and having a pity party for yourself, like, just get up and do it. She did, and it's it's really amazing. Yeah, And within six months she went
back to her job where she built airplane cabins. Think about that's nuts, Like, I don't know, I think her recovery story this must have been absolutely so traumatic for her. And to have resilience like that and be able to retrain your body a whole new way of life after living twenty years only knowing, you know, a certain way of doing things is kind of amazing. Yeah, it is. And she was also saying that she had phantom pain. Do you know what that is? I know we've touched
on it in the grossroom a little bit. But can you explain it. Yeah, it's just when a person has an amputation and they still think that they are feeling pain in like let's say, for example, they get their leg amputated below their knee, but they still say they feel pain in their toes that don't even exist anymore. And it's it's a real phenomenon that people experience. And it's not only just pain but sensation, like they might feel like their toes are too hot or too cold
when they're not even there, which is kind of insane. Well, don't we have an article where we were talking about kind of the opposite where somebody has this psychological feeling like they shouldn't have their limb so then they get it cut off. Oh yeah, that's that's like a whole other thing that people just I mean, there's there's differences because like we always talk about this when I used to tell Pop Pop Py, she get his leg amputated,
and what is wrong with you? But because he said his foot hurts, his foot just hurts so bad and he said it felt like a toothache all the time. And I would say, well, just get your foot amputated then and get a prosthetic. I saw it in the hospital, people just having like a semi normal, anatomical looking foot that got it amputated because they were in some kind of chronic pain that couldn't be fixed with surgery or whatever.
That's a little bit different than people that just feel like they they were born and they shouldn't they they feel like they should be an amputee and they want to just cut off one of their limbs because they don't like their right leg or something. You guys, that's just a little bit whack. Like I can't get down with that. You guys have no idea what dinners are like in our house. While we call you doc your death as a joke because you'll just be like, just
cut your foot off. Or like one day, I'm sitting at my desk and take you a sure of my foot and she's like, you have rain notes and I'm like, okay, the diagnosis is out of damn. But you know what, you could think that I'm extreme. But the guy sat around for years and didn't do anything because his foot hurt so bad and that's not good to do that, no, And instead he could have healed in six weeks and got fitted for a prosthetic and been walking around like
millions of people do that have amputated limbs. So you might think it's extreme, but I'm just being practical, Like why are you so attached to your foot anyway? Like, if it hurts, just get rid of it. I think a lot of people can't just get rid of a body like that. But I kind of understand what you're saying. This next story is called not Cooler. It was also
submitted by a gross Remember. So this guy was riding his motorcycle and in front of him, the driver had a trailer with a cooler on it, and it was one of those open trailer Like what are those things called? Do you even know? It's just like the trailer bed. No, but they make me nervous because the story is like this because yeah, it's like a trailer bed and then people bungee cord shit to it. Yeah, and you're always just like this is not going to end. Well, you
just know that, right, Yeah. So this guy has this cooler, like not secured well at all to this trailer that's on his truck, and he had one of those old school coolers on it, which was you know. Today, I feel like most coolers are made where the lids are still attached when you open them. But this looked like one of the ones from like the eighties or nineties where it was like the old white lid that just
like you took the whole thing off. So basically, because this thing is not secured at all, it just the lid flies off and hits the guy on the motorcycle. You would think he got shot. There is so much blood. Yeah, it hit him right in the face. It's nuts. It is nuts. There's so much blood and he's he's lucky he's not dead, honestly, because he was able to pull over.
And it's kind of amazing because that really maybe if it was a little bit harder, it could have really given on brain damage, knocked him off the bike, killed him. I mean, it's just so scared, No, it really is. And when you just I guess, like when you get hit in the face, it just bleeds so much. It just it is very vascular the faces and the and the scalp. There's a lot of little blood vessels there
that bleed. I mean, most people know that whenever they whenever they get an injury like that it bleeds a lot, but it looks like did it break his doll or something, or it looks like it broke some of his teeth. It. Yeah, yeah, it was. It was really traumatic. And I mean, listen, I'm pretty anti motorcycle as all of you know, because there's just so many different things that could happen. And it's like my dad always rode a motorcycle, and it's
it's like, you're not worried. I'm not worried that my dad wouldn't be able to ride the motorcycle. I'm worried about everything else around you. Yeah, things like this, things flying off. I mean, that would suck if it happened to a car, and that could that happens sometimes, and I've seen things like that just at the medical's office or medical examiner's office, like when I was rotating air of things like flying off the off of a car and landing into the windshields and things like that. So
that could just happen anybody driving. But when it's when there's a car barrier in between you, you have a little bit more protection than just you against that that item, you know. Yeah, And I just don't think a lot a lot of people I feel like, just like throw stuff in their car or just aren't thinking about stuff and they never secure it down properly, and you don't think of how horrible something like that could be, especially if you're on the highway and going really fast and
it happens and just a split second. Oh every skill time I'm driving, if I see anyone that has anything in the back of their car like that, I always go as far away from as possible from them because I'm so scared of something like that happening. Oh yeah, you're sent You see that all the time, just people putting at even if it's a mattress. It's soft, right,
it's not gonna your car. But like, you don't need that flying in front of your car when you're going seventy miles an hour because you know what I mean, Like it will be a problem if you hit it, or if you swerve and hit another car. So I think we can also agree that nothing is scarier than driving behind one of those trucks that's carrying a bunch of cars on it. Oh yeah, that, I know. I hate that, so fad I know you're you're like the
worst with that. I'm always like this is gonna be some final destination like thing happening with one of them. Didn't we look it up though, Like, didn't we look it up to see if that happens. And then there was some cases of it happening because we're just like, there's no way that this has never happened before, that these cars don't fall off of this thing. No, it's
definitely happened before, but it's not as common. Like they're bouncing on there and stuff, and you're like one chain has to break and those things go flying, right, But I think that it's definitely happened, but it's not common.
Another thing to note about this particular case is that it is really important that if you do ride a motorcycle to put not only have a helmet, but to wear a face shield, because if he was wearing a face shield that was a very hard plastic it may have saved him in this case from getting at least an injury of this of this severity that was causing him to bleed and stuff. It may have hit his shield that it may have broke, and it could have even it could have even hurt him just as bad.
But you should I mean stuff like rocks and little pebbles flying in your face could really hurt you and especially could injure your eyes. So it's just important.
Yeah.
I mean, we were just driving the other day and a rock hit your windshield all of a sudden or what was it an a corner, a rock, I don't know, but imagine just being open and then that hits you. Something about the design of my windshield because Gabe was saying that too. It's just like I have like five nicks on my windshield from rocks and stuff. It just must just the angle of it or something must just be more prone to getting injured. Yeah, that is very bizarre.
I mean, feel like it should be a really good glass though, don't you like it shouldn't be getting nicked that easily, But well it does, all right. Let's get onto this next one called dangerous weapon. So this guy was sleeping at his son's house because he had a power outage, and as he was sleeping, he rolled out of bed and landed on this thermost that was laying on the floor, and during the fall, the plastic lid
of this thermost. Just to give you I was trying, I was having a hard time visualizing you before I saw the pictures. It looks like the lid of like a Stanley cup or something like yeah, or like a yeah, I was gonna say, like a Yetti coffee cut that plastic lid that tweezes into into the cop Yeah. So as he is falling and hits this thing, the lid breaks and it cut part of his ear off. Yeah. It's so outrageous, like a big chunk of his ear off.
So the plastic I don't even understand how it broke just with his body, seems yeah, because it's such thick plastic, you know. Yeah, But I don't know whatever angle it happened, but the plastic broke, and it was so sharp that it amputated a chunk of his ear off. Well, I think if those things I'm talking about one particular day where I had one of those to go Starbucks cups and my husband decided it would be funny to karate chop it off of the kitchen counter, and then it
fell on the floor and broke like that. So maybe if they do fall from maybe if it was on a table or something and fell and hit the floor, it maybe had like a little stress crack and then him falling on it just did the job. I don't know. But so the weirdest part of this story is that they decided in his family that they should take this chunk of his ear to the hospital, and they poured contact lens solution in a baggy and then brought it
to the hospital. Could that do anything to help it? No? I, in fact would say that it may have made it impossible to reattach it because contact I understand that you would think contact solution is like saline solution, but it's not. It has like chemicals in it and antibacterial chemicals that
kill any kind of germs to clean the contacts. Right, So there is saline, but there's other things in it, and there's like hydrogen peroxide in it, right, And hydrogen peroxide while it does it would kill germs and prevent any kind of bacteria from growing on the chunk of ear, it also breaks down and the tissue and kills tissue. So they may have actually ruined the piece of tissue by putting it in the contact solution. You're really supposed to just put it on ice and put it You're
supposed to. You really should rinse it off, wrap it up in gauze at anything that you have it's sterile at home, would be okay, but you would put it in a bag and then put that bag on ice and bring it to the hospital. That way would really be the best thing to do. Yeah, I mean it kind of sucks because it's like I would think maybe I was doing the right thing too, but I don't know,
like I would nobody has. Nobody has like this list in the back of their head of like what happens if some because nobody's thinking that anybody's going to have a body part cut off in front of them. But I'm just telling everybody here now, don't put it in contact solution and the best thing is to just put it on ice and bring it and let them handle it. You're not there's no magic chemical in your house that's
going to save this thing. Like, and it could just be they couldn't reattach it whatever, but I think that they fucked it up. This episode is brought to you by The Grosser Room. Guys, guess what. The Grosser Room is going on sale tomorrow night, Wednesday night, and it is going to be only twenty dollars for your first year of the Grosserroom. And you will get to see thousands of posts that we have, videos, photos, lots of these cases that we talk about on Mother No's death,
especially six shocking stories. You could see the case we just were talking about with the cooler incident and how much blood there was everywhere, you wouldn't believe it. And this poor twenty year old girl who had to get her arm amputated, and you could see how horrific that crash was and watch the video of her tying her shoes. It's really amazing. So join tomorrow for only twenty dollars for the first year. So visit the grossroom dot com
for more info and to sign up. Okay, In twenty thirteen, in Brazil, this woman gave birth to her son. So she noticed as a young baby he had really odd behavior, meaning that he would always have his arms crossed over his chest. When he started to walk, he would walk with his hands behind his back, with his hands in his pocket. I mean, it's kind of weird for like a one year old to be. Yeah, remember Lillian knew so when she first started walking, she like crawled like
a spider, like half of a leg up. Yeah, that's so funny. Those videos are hilarious. Yeah, so this woman realized that her uncle used to have similar mannerisms, but she just thought it was weird and stopped thinking too much about it because she's like, whatever, I mean, he's a baby. So around this time, she also started having dreams, and in her dreams, someone came to her and said that her uncle, who was murdered decades before this, that he was back, but as her son. So he basically
was reincarnated in her son's body. But again, it was a dream, so she didn't think all that much of it, but she thought it was really weird. So then she did tell her brother that she had this dream, and he thought he also had intuition that the baby might have been connected to the uncle in some way. I mean, what would you even think if the family member was
telling you this. I you know, there's some stories that I've heard like this that, And when we finished telling you this, you're gonna be like, Okay, let's just think about this. And the only reason that we're bringing this up, this very non scientific death story, is because it's actually part of a scientific paper where there's lots of examples of children who claim to be reincarnated as someone else.
And when you think about a child telling a story and some of the similarities, you almost think there's no way even if an adult tried to coach a kid to do all these things, that it wouldn't be so coincidental. And so let's get into more specifics of this particular case. They had said that the child had made thirteen statements about his previous life, and nine of them were correct,
well correct something they resembled exact life experiences of the uncle. Yeah, so the uncle apparently was working at a job and someone came in and shot him to death, and the child made statements saying that he got shot in the head and that he was laying in water. So witnesses that were there that saw this uncle getting murdered said that he was laying in blood when he died. He just knew these very specific things. He knew that the uncle had a wooden rocking horse when he was a child,
and then he knew that he had a horse. That the apparently the uncle had a horse and the mom had given it away or sold it and told him that, you know, they never explained where the horse went. And he said he had a horse when he was a child. That ran away so well that and then he just started doing other weird things, like when he was in between three and four years old, he would get underneath of a bicycle like he was fixing it like a car.
And the uncle was a manic, so that's kind of also weird behavior for a three year old to get underneath of a bicycle be fixing it and know all the mannerisms. And yet so they had the horse too. He also called his grandmother, who was the uncle's sister, by her childhood nickname that nobody called her except for him, and her daughter didn't even know that she had this nickname.
One of the weirdest parts of this case as well, if this isn't weird enough, is that he had this in debt in his skull called an occipital concavity, and it resembles an area where a person would be shot like that that's how the direction of the projectile would go through the skull, and it's just very it's a very unusual defect to have of the skull, and it's just weird that this guy was shot in the skull and the kids saying that he was shot and he
has this giant in debt in his skull. It's so weird. Yeah, I mean they were referencing in this scientific paper, so this was kind of like the main case they focused on in this scientific paper. But they were saying that overall, a lot of times that these cases would most happen often in people associated with really violent deaths. It would
more often than not be a male child. I think seventy four percent of the cases were investigated in Asia, so that's really interesting that most of it was kind of like overseas from here because just spiritually, you know, people in the United States, like this family was Catholic, and there's a lot of Catholic people in the United States, so they were saying people that are Catholic don't often
believe in reincarnation. So the family was having a really hard time believing what they were hearing and how it was matching up with some other Asian cultures really strongly believe in reincarnation. So they were looking into it a little further over there, which is so fascinating to think about. And in some of these cases, the child was born with some congenital anomaly that, like in case, mimicked the way in which the person died in some form of a scar, or if they were stabbed or shot like
in this case. It's so interesting, it is. And if somebody said to me right now, like what do you think about reincarnation, I would just be like, it's whatever, it's probably bullshit. But then when you hear stories like this, it's just like it really makes you think the guy, the guy the kid knew that he was shot by. He said, I was shot by a theft and here the guy that did shoot the uncle was someone that was stealing money by from the company he was working for.
It's just like, how would a child know this? And they interviewed the parents, and they interviewed witnesses of the murder and everything, and they just don't None of them were in the same room together to even tell the kid. The parents didn't even know a lot of this stuff. It's just so crazy. Yeah, And they also said that most often children who claim these previous life memories spontaneously
blurt them out. I mean two in five years old when they start speaking coherently, and then as they get older, it gradually stops by the time they're around eight or nine years old. So that's really crazy. Do you think they're starting to form their own memories that are like now taking over what they knew from this alleged past life. I don't. I don't know, because then to say that you would have to you would have to say that this is one hundred percent really happening, and a lot
of things could just be coincidental, you know. But I like that this was done in a scientific way because they're really going through the proper motions of like how to prove that this is actually happening, you know. Yeah, it's and this is not the only kid one of it said. It was part of a larger study called National Survey of Cases of Reincarnation type in Brazil. It's pretty it's pretty specific, but lots of different examples, and that one was just really interesting to me. Yeah, it
really was, all right. This next one's called a series of fortunate events. So on a cold night, this guy was walking home. He might have been a little drunk. He was walking home from some bars, so he had
taken his gloves off at some point to text. As he was walking, he went to climb over a snowpile, slipped and hit his head, so his glasses and his phone go flying and because I'm assuming he was a little buzz he didn't think to put his gloves back on and was searching for about an hour in the snow. Can't see that well because his glasses flew off, and he's looking for his phone in his glasses with bare fingers, just searching through the snow. And what happens. Hey got
severe frostbite. The pictures of this are crazy. It literally looks like you took your hands and dipped them halfway in acid. Yeah, I mean, it really can look nasty. And frostbite'es a weird thing because sometimes it could kind of sneak up on you. You don't really know what's happening at the time, especially if you have darker skin color.
It's really difficult to determine that your skin has turned earned a color it shouldn't be kind of, you know, and sometimes you could do too much damage that it can't be fixed. Luckily, in this case, they were able to bring him to the hospital and they gave him something called they put him in a hyperbaric oxygen chamber, which is it justice to increase blood flow, because it blood flow is what heals any kind of wound and bringing more oxygen to the site of the wound is
what's going to make it heal. And fortunately they were able to allow it to heal and they didn't have to amputate his fingers because a lot of times if you get severer frostbite, it ends up in amputation. Every time I think of frostbite, I think of that scene in Mister Deed's which is that was so funny when that happened. Yeah, Adam Sandler's like toes are black and he has the butler like hitting them with a what is that called, like the poker for a fireplace. Yeah,
that's all I ever associated frostbite with. But yeah, I mean, he is really lucky that he was able to save the I can't. Oh my god, it's so gross looking at the pictures of it, just the way it looks like it hurts so bad. So when you're outside and it's really really cold out your body, you know, your body's ninety eight degrees fahrenheit, right, and when you're cold, your body has to stay that hot in order for
you to live and your organs to stay alive. So what happens is that the body turns off all of the blood vessels, basically in your arms, your legs, your nose, anywhere that's like far away from your heart that needs to be beating right to keep you alive. It kind of squeezes off all of those vessels. It's called vaso constriction, so all the blood stays towards the heart to keep
the body warm. Because really it's like your body's way of saving your life, because you could be a torso you don't have to have arms and legs to live, right. But unfortunately with that, when the blood isn't going to the arms and the feet as much, you're going to have an increased susceptibility of getting frostbite, which is why you get it on your fingers and your toes and
tip of your nose and things like that. So it's pretty it's pretty cool, like from a biology standpoint, how the body kind of adapts to certain environments, but you really need to be careful in those situations because you can get frostbite and lose your fingertips, even your hands. I mean, it's it could get really bad. Yeah, didn't we report earlier this year that at a Kansas City Chiefs game, it was so cold outside that so many people were getting frostbite and hospitalized for it. Yeah, you
just don't think. I guess you don't think about it if you're outside for that long of a period of time. But just think, like, your body has to be as hot as a summer day, right, ninety eight degrees, So if you go outside and you're outside for hours and it's degrees out, I mean, this is going to happen to everyone, you know. Yeah, all right. Our last story is called let Me Try and pick your brain. Early in the morning one day, a man with schizophrenia broke
into a construction site and stole a pickax. So I think everybody could imagine this is not going well. So shortly after, he took the pickaxe and just chose a random person on the street and started attacking them and hit them in the head. Yeah, so we hit them in the head, and then the pickaxe broke off, so
it's on a wooden handle and it broke. So the guy then picked up the piece that was broken that had the axe on it and continued hitting them in the head with it, and then hit him in the abdomen a few times, and then hit him in the hand and then just left it and walked away. They were able to call. They bystanders were there and they were able to call the ambulance. And but I mean, he was he was dead when when they showed up,
they pronounced him dead. So because this is kind of like, this is like a sharp instrument but it's big, Like what kind of injuries does this cause? Exactly? Because would it be more like a stab wound because it's sharp, or it's a special kind of wound called the chop wound. So it's it's a combination of what you would see with blunt trauma. So with blunt trauma, you would see bruises, and you would see tearing or lacerations, and then it's and then with sharp trauma, you would see really smooth
borders of an injury. So think about if you hit someone with a baseball bat versus stab someone, the injuries would just look different. And this is kind of a combination of both of those things. So in the skull, in the scalp, we saw the injuries. They looked like almost like life wounds because they were very smooth and sharp, but also had bruising around them because of the heavy object hitting against the skull. And also when the I
mean this is really disgusting. But when the pick got underneath of the skin and the guy pulled it, it ripped the skin right off of the scalp, you know, so disgusting. And then also so when they took the when they reflected the scalp and looked at the skull, there was a skull fracture. There were two skull fractures, one linear one that just looked like a line that was cracked. But the other one had a very specific appearance that you would see in blunt trauma. That it
was a depressed skull fracture. So we talked about that. Remember we wrote up that case of that baseball player that got killed with the baseball like years ago. Oh, Ray Chapman. Yeah, So that's the kind of skull fracture that you would see that it's a very specific look. It almost looks like a cracked egg in a way that all the pieces stay together, but they kind of
compress in where this heavy object has hit. But interesting, when they took the skull off, they were able to see that there was like this hole in the center of it that looked like a V shaped triangle, which was from the tip of the axe going through so it's just a combination of both of those wounds. But the interesting thing is is that that's not what killed him. Was the sky The getting hit in the head didn't kill them, so what did? So when they opened so
we had a wound on the abdomen. He got stabbed in the abdomen a couple of times, and when they opened them up, the pickaxe had went through his a order and he bled to death internally. Isn't that nuts that think you get hit that many times in the head and that's not what takes you out. Yeah, I mean, they didn't say anything in the report about him having any kind of major brain trauma or bleed from that.
Obviously he'd have some kind of injury from it, but it was very, uh, superficial as far as as the damage done to the skull. It wasn't like a super big skull fracture that there were chunks of brain coming through and stuff, you know what I mean. It's just so scary to think that you're just like walking down the street and that something like that would happen to you. Yeah, we hear about it a lot, Like it's scary. Yeah, I mean, there's nothing you could do to prevent it either.
It's just horrific. I posted this case in the gross room yesterday, was it or Sunday maybe, saying that we were going to talk about it on the podcast today, and a couple of people in the comments said that they were in a situation where someone it like beat them up. It just came up to them and punched them in the face or something, when when they totally unprovoked it. Like, imagine that just somebody coming up to
you and beating you up like that. It's just so weird that there was a thing going on a couple of months ago where I guess I'm probably watching this. I think that women that were influencers were walking around cities, you know, like filming themselves talking or whatever, and then they were getting like punched in the face when they were in the middle of taking videos, so they had the attack like on film. Yeah, well that's probably why
they did it. I don't remember hearing about that, but it's just horrific because Bethany Frankel said it happened to her, and a lot of people didn't believe her. But well, the scary thing is is that when you just said that, I was like, yeah that didn't happen, but yeah, who knows, who knows? But all right, thank you guys so much. Don't forget to submit your shocking story to stories at
Mothernosdeath dot com. And if you're curious about all the articles we're talking about, we send out a newsletter once a week and you guys could sign up for that. The link for that is in the description of every episode. And don't forget to leave us a review on Apple or wherever you listen to podcasts. And don't forget to sign up for the gross Froom tomorrow night. Twenty dollars for the year.
Thanks bye, Thank you for listening to Mother Noos Death. As a reminder, my training is as a pathologist assistant. I have a master's level education and specialize in anatomy and pathology education. I am not a doctor and I have not diagnosed or treated anyone dead or alive without
the assistance of a licensed medical doctor. This show, my website, and social media accounts are designed to educate and inform people based on my experience working in pathology, so they can make healthier decisions regarding their life and well being. Always remember that science is changing every day and the opinions expressed in this episode are based on my knowledge
of those subjects at the time of publication. If you are having a medical problem, have a medical question, or having a medical emergency, please contact your physician or visit an urgent care center, emergency room, or hospital. Please rate, review, and subscribe to Mother Knows Death on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, or anywhere you get podcasts.
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