It's all fun and games until somebody gets hurt. Sometimes pranks that people thought would be cool turn out to be cruel, and even occasionally backfire with deadly consequences. It's no laughing matter when someone gets killed in the interest of some innocent fun, but it happens more often than you might think. Here are some horrible pranks where a little mischief turned into tragic mayhem.
Halloween pranks turn fatal
Nov 26, 2016 The majority of the time, stunts and action sequences are pulled off seamlessly, but there have been times when things have gone tragically wrong.
Halloween tricks might be an ordinary part of the holiday's festivities, but for one teen in 2014, the joke went horribly awry when she lost her life as a result of her stunt. Adrian Broadway, a 15-year-old girl from Little Rock, Arkansas, was with her friends toilet-papering, egging, and throwing mayonnaise on a car, in retaliation for a prank someone else had pulled on her group. Unfortunately, a 48-year-old man came out of the house and opened fire on them in their car, killing her and injuring one of her friends. The shooter, Willie Noble, was later sentenced to 30 years in prison for Broadway's death.
A fatal jump-scare
What seemed like an innocent jump-scare became fatal in 2013 when an 18-year-old girl named Premila Lal hid in a closet at her house, knowing that a family friend was there watching over the property. She planned to surprise him by jumping out of the closet, but the housesitter, 21-year-old Nerrek Galley, was packing heat at the time — this despite playing video games with her 15-year-old brother. When he heard the noises of her entry, he grabbed his gun to investigate. Believing her to be an intruder, Galley shot the girl when she opened the door, and she later succumbed to her injuries at an area hospital. No charges were filed against Galley.
Bigfoot suit scares teens into committing manslaughter
There've been a number of hilarious hoaxes orchestrated in the name of Sasquatch, but one man's decision to suit up as Bigfoot to summon a few scares cost him his life. 44-year-old Randy Lee Tenley impersonated the elusive beast in 2012 by donning a military-style ghillie suit on the side of Kalispell, Montana's Highway 93, to spook travelers on the road into thinking they'd witnessed the sought-after animal. Instead, he was run over by two teen drivers and died as a result of his injuries.
Never tamper with stop signs
A traffic sign antic in Circleville, Ohio became the site of a horrific crash scene in 2011 after a pair of local teens decided to wrap an intersection's stop sign in plastic and petroleum jelly, rendering it invisible to drivers. The pair — 19-year-old Seth Stonerock and 18-year-old Derek Greenlee — apparently thought their roadside ruse was funny and bragged about it on Facebook. Sadly, two elderly women — 85-year-old Mary Spangler and 81-year-old Jeanne Shea — died after driving past the concealed sign and being struck by another vehicle. Stonerock was sentenced to four years in prison for being the central culprit, while charges were dropped against Greenlee, who claimed he tried to talk his friend out of it.
Ring, run, and die
'Ding, dong, ditch' was a common source of young amusement at one time, but when 16-year-old Mark Drewes engaged in the old door-to-door pastime in Boca Raton, Florida in 2003, it proved to be a deadly game. Drewes was shot to death while walking away from the home of Jay Levin, who claimed he thought Drewes was an armed intruder. Levin pleaded guilty to manslaughter and was sentenced to 52 weekends in jail, and ordered to pay $750,000 in restitution to the boy's parents.
The most fatal wedgie
Wedgies might be an ordinary part of childhood roughhousing, but in 2013, an underwear escapade became fatal. During an argument, 33-year-old Brad Lee Davis pulled his 58-year-old stepfather Denver St. Clair's bottoms so far up, the elastic band slipped around his neck and asphyxiated him. Davis claimed that the act was in self-defense and that St. Clair was supposedly insulting Davis' mother, but he was ultimately sentenced to 30 years for first-degree manslaughter for St. Clair's death.
A cop tragically overreacts to a silly prank
In another underwear-related fatality, a group of teens thought it'd be funny to throw their soaked drawers onto a nearby cop car after a late night swim. However, once the officer tracked down the kids later that night, his retaliation involved the use of deadly force. Trooper B.D. Gillespie of West Virginia suited up to exact revenge upon the jokesters and, after engaging in a skirmish with the group, assaulted 18-year-old Timothy Hill with pepper spray, his baton and, ultimately, two rounds from his gun. The boy died as a result of his wounds.
A heart attack in the line of duty
In 2005, five high school students in St. Charles, Illinois took their after-hours hijinks a bit too far. They broke into their school and stole a golf cart with the intention of driving into a campus pond, as others had done before. They were caught in the act and, during a foot pursuit of the young suspects, 53-year-old Sergeant Daniel Paul Figgins suffered a heart attack. He was later pronounced dead at a local hospital.
A prank call makes a nurse kill herself
In 2012, the first pregnancy of Duchess Kate Middleton was an international spectacle, especially when she was admitted to King Edward VII Hospital in London for complications associated with severe morning sickness. Australian radio show hosts Mel Greig and Mike Christian decided call the hospital while impersonating the Queen of England, in order to get details on Middleton's condition. The answering nurse, Jacintha Saldanha, believed them and patched them through to her nurse. A few days later, upon finding out she'd been duped, Saldanha was so humiliated that she took her own life, by hanging herself in the nurse's quarters at work.
Toilet paper prank turned deadly
In October 2010, Alabama firefighter James McRae was driving around in his Jeep pickup when he noticed four teenagers toilet-papering his house. He didn't think they were just there to TP, though — he thought they were trying to break in. So he pursued them, and they jumped in their car and drove off. Not giving up, McRae called 911 while trying to get a license plate number. Unfortunately for McRae, that's when disaster struck. He wasn't wearing a seatbelt and lost control of his truck. He crashed hard through a fence, was ejected from the vehicle, and died on the spot, according to the Alabama Press-Register. Worse, McRae had just married his girlfriend of five years, only a few months back.
None of the teens were charged with his death, though hopefully they all learned that even the silliest of dumb pranks can have severe consequences.
The unloaded BB gun that wasn't
November 25, 2010 — Thanksgiving Day — was the worst day of the Charbonneau family's lives. On that day, Jeffrey Charbonneau and his best friend, Nicholas Bell, were hanging out. Eventually, Charbonneau passed out. Because there's no humor like instant pain, Bell decided to grab what he thought was an unloaded BB gun and to shoot at or around his sleeping friend.
It wasn't at all funny because this supposedly unloaded BB gun was actually a fully loaded shotgun. Bell's planned joke became an execution; he shot his best friend point-blank in the chest, killing him instantly. He apparently didn't mean to, and in 2012 owned up to everything, pleading no-contest to manslaughter, simple assault with a weapon, and reckless endangerment. According to the Manchester Journal of Vermont, a judge sentenced Bell to just one year in prison for the latter two charges, with seven more suspended for the manslaughter. Charbonneau's family wanted more prison time, but the judge decided that this was simply a tragic accident, that Bell didn't mean to even point it at his friend (though what else he could have been planning to pretend-shoot at is a mystery), and that he was truly repentant and was in no danger to be violent in the future.
An extreme overreaction to egging
On December 2, 2006, 14-year-old Danny Crawford and two of his friends were egging cars. It's not the nicest prank in the world, but they certainly didn't deserve to die for it. But the Columbus Dispatch reported that's exactly what happened to Crawford, after an egg struck the car of Michael Gross and his 22-year-old son, Michael Jr. Enraged, Gross Sr. jumped out of the car and chased after the kids. Gross Jr., meanwhile, fired a pistol at the kids, and hit Crawford, killing him.
For a while, the Crawford family had no justice, as the Gross guys kept pointing the blame at a mysterious man named 'T,' who supposedly had borrowed their car and shot Crawford. There was no T, however, and eventually Gross Sr. came clean, making a deal with prosecutors for immunity in exchange for testifying against his son. Gross Jr. was sentenced to 15 years in prison in July 2010.
Off the tracks
In July 1982, 15-year-old Peter Wade and his friends were drinking and playing near some train tracks in Fair Lawn, New Jersey. They got the idea to throw a switch that would mess with the tracks, not to mention an oncoming train's planned route. It sure worked. The train didn't make the turn it was supposed to, and instead derailed, slamming into the wall of a factory. While the passengers all survived, the conductor, John Duffy, was killed immediately. The kids were arrested, tried as adults for manslaughter, and served some time.
Wade put in five years in a youth correctional facility, then went on to become a prominent Wall Street stock analyst pulling in millions. He also became a filmmaker, putting out 2005's Tracks, based on the story of what he and his friends did back in 1982. He claims he made the film to help, as ABC News put it, 'reach out to troubled teenagers,' though the Duffy family claims he should've found a less 'self-serving' way to help than make a feature film he could profit from. Plus, as they put it, all that does is send a message to kids that if you senselessly murder somebody, you too can grow up to make millions of dollars and your own movie.
The worst Halloween prank of all
For Halloween 2013, 16-year-old Jordan Morlan of Fern Creek, Kentucky, decided to play a scary prank on his sister. He planned to pretend to hang himself and then come back to life, scaring her out of her wits. Unfortunately, he hung himself for real, and lost both oxygen and consciousness in under 30 seconds. Shortly thereafter, his sister — the one he was trying to scare — found him and called for their mother. She cut Jordan down, but it was too late. Jordan's organs had started to fail and he was comatose. Twelve hours later, he was dead.
Sadly, this was far from the only case of someone dying while pretending to hang themselves as a joke. According to Snopes, several teenagers over the years have tried it with deadly results. It's simply not a good idea — find another way to scare people that won't snuff your life out way too early.
Online cruelty
Some tragic pranks start out harmless, but this one was cruel from the get-go. According to the mother of 11-year-old Tysen Benz, he received messages over social media on March 14, 2017, saying his 13-year-old girlfriend had just killed herself. His mom thinks it was the girlfriend herself sending those messages while pretending to be someone else. Distraught, Benz replied to mutual friends that he was going to do the same. Apparently, nobody ever told Benz it was a prank and that his girlfriend was still alive. In addition, reportedly none of these friends told an adult that Benz was threatening suicide. Instead, they continued to tell Benz his girlfriend was dead, and either assumed Benz wouldn't actually kill himself or simply didn't care.
Sadly, Benz followed through with his threat. Within an hour of getting those messages, Benz had hung himself in his room. His mom found him later on and rushed him to a hospital, but it was too late. He never regained consciousness, and three weeks later he died. The girl in question has been charged with malicious use of telecom services, as well as committing a crime via a computer, but only time will tell if the realization of what she did will change her for the better.
By/July 9, 2018 6:13 EDT
Making a movie — particularly a big-budget, eye-popping, senses-shattering blockbuster — is nothing short of a miracle. There are so many things that a film's different teams have to get right. Actors must deliver their lines just so, the sets and lighting have to look real, and the stunts should look believable and feel death-defying. The latter is probably the trickiest element to nail: even in this day and age, where filmmakers can create entire worlds with CGI and other visual effects technology, there's nothing quite like a practical, good-old fashioned stunt. Talented stunt performers risk their lives to get the shots that often wind up being the highlight of the entire movie.
While correctly executing a stunt rides a fine line between success and disaster, stuntmen and stuntwomen don't always pull off the moment exactly as planned. Nevertheless, the cameras are rolling and sometimes the footage captured is so exciting that filmmakers simply have to keep it in the final cut of the film. (Or the stunt ended in actual pain and misery ... so more takes weren't possible.) Here are some really scary movie moments where the fear and danger were real.
Just talkin' 'bout airshaft
Part of the charm of Die Hard, and what makes it such a classic, is its premise: John McClane (Bruce Willis) is a cop, but essentially a regular guy, rising to the occasion to thwart a massive terrorist plot threatening Nakatomi Plaza. In real life, Bruce Willis was also basically a regular guy, not yet an action movie stud, best known as the star of the romantic comedy series Moonlighting. As such, the services of a stuntman were required for the film's wonderful and exciting set pieces.
One such moment: McClane leaps into an elevator shaft. Willis' stunt double was supposed to grab onto a vent ... but he missed by quite a bit and latches onto another one. The bit speaks to McClane's character: normal guy out of his league trying to be brave and save the day, and it makes the viewer jump a little. That's why the filmmakers kept it in.
Hoverboards aren't all they're cracked up to be
In one of the most audience-delighting scenes in Back to the Future Part II, four members of Biff's gang chase Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) and crash through glass on the famous Hill Valley clock tower. As the stunt was planned, all four stunt performers were going to be outfitted in harnesses and suspended from a crane, which would provide enough momentum to send them crashing through the glass windows. Then, a crew member was supposed to press a button on a remote control, sending them descending to the safety of airbags below. After a couple of test runs went wrong, stuntwoman Lisa McCullough bowed out for safety concerns, and stuntwoman Cheryl Wheeler stepped in.
The cameras rolled, and the stunt performers 'flew' through the air. But Wheeler's rig didn't work correctly. She flew off-course, and instead of busting through a candy-glass window, she hit a pillar on the outside of the building. Adding injury to injury, that one tech remotely released her, sending her crashing 25 feet ... onto concrete.
Wheeler was severely injured and sued the studio behind Back to the Future II, but nevertheless, the accident footage is in the film. When the gang crashes through the glass doors, Wheeler is visible falling onto the sidewalk.
Rambo vs tree
The action in First Blood, the first in Sylvester Stallone's Rambo franchise, is so raw and visceral that it's sometimes difficult to watch. (That sensibility plays in with the film's story of a deeply troubled, post-traumatic stress disorder-affected Vietnam War veteran.)
One scene in particular looked like it must have been painful for Stallone to shoot ... and that's because it was. While on the run from the military officers charged with capturing and quelling him, Rambo jumps off a cliff and falls through some trees and he comes up hard against some of their mighty branches. Stallone performed one take of the scene, and then dutifully did one more. Director Ted Kotcheff requested another, but Stallone politely declined. He was a little uncomfortable, having broken a rib on the branch on take two. 'It was pretty easy to act out the pain,' Stallone quipped on the First Blood DVD commentary track.
There isn't a cure for death, though
Dylan O'Brien made a name for himself with The Maze Runner, a trilogy of science-fiction films based on the popular series of dystopian young adult novels. O'Brien happily did his own stunts for the films. 'I love adding that physical aspect to a role,' he told USA Today. 'It's tough but it's great.'
Is it though? Because on the third day of filming the third Maze Runner entry, The Death Cure, in 2016, a scene involving a car went awry. O'Brien reportedly suffered a concussion, a facial fracture, and brain trauma. Production on the film shut down for months while its star could recover.
When O'Brien returned to the set, director Wes Ball had a delicate question for the actor: Would it be alright to use the footage of that perilous injury in the film? 'My response actually was like, 'I need you to, in a way. I would be more heartbroken than if it just went to waste,' O'Brien told USA Today.
The hang-out from The Hangover led to a devastating injury
The Hangover Part II re-captures a lot of the ridiculous bro magic from the first film, but switches the setting from Las Vegas to Thailand. In a high-speed car chase scene, a terrified Stu (Ed Helms) hangs from a car window. It was a relatively simple shot, and some of the footage was obtained with the use of a stuntman. Australian stunt performer Scott McLean actually drooped out of the moving vehicle ... but the stunt driver of the car messed up. They failed to swerve at the right moment, and McLean's head collided with a truck.
McLean was in a coma for weeks, and doctors initially thought he'd never walk or speak again. Fortunately, he did eventually start physical therapy and the long road to recovery, in spite of sustaining a brain injury that likely ended his stunt career. Not only did the scene in question wind up in The Hangover Part II, but it made it into the film's trailer, too.
The power of the wire guy compels you
When we think of actors who proudly do their own stunts, we think of Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson, Vin Diesel, or Tom Cruise. Well, Ellen Burstyn is arguably tougher than any of those guys.
The role of Chris McNeil, mother of an evil-possessed child in 1973's The Exorcist, was quite physically taxing. In one scene, the supernaturally-powered little girl (Linda Blair) forcefully throws her mother to the ground. Because the scene was shot relatively close-up, a stunt performer wasn't possible: Burstyn had to take the hard fall herself, helped along with a wire and an off-camera wire operator.
On take one, Burstyn indeed hit the ground, painfully. Then director William Friedkin asked for another take. 'And I said, 'Billy, he's pulling me too hard,' Burstyn told HuffPost Live. 'And Billy said, 'Well it has to look real.' And I said, 'I know it has to look real, but I'm telling you, I could get hurt.' And so he said, 'Okay, don't pull her so hard.' Nevertheless, on that next take, Burstyn says the wire operator 'smashed me into the floor.' Per Friedkin's wishes, the take does 'look real,' because Burstyn got really hurt, really bad. She says she suffered permanent spine damage from the incident.
A wicked injury from The Wizard of Oz
The Wizard of Oz is full of dazzling moments, and the fantastical, colorful, effects-heavy film (impressive, considering it was released in 1939) became an all-time classic. One of the biggest comes shortly after Dorothy arrives in the merry old land of Oz, specifically Munchkinland. Margaret Hamilton, in an unbridled performance as the Wicked Witch of the West, was supposed to disappear into thin air, thanks to some obscuring smoke and pyrotechnics, as well as a well-placed trap door for Hamilton's physical exit.
But when cameras were rolling, the door didn't work properly, meaning Hamilton literally faced a bunch of fireworks. Hamilton endured such severe burns to her face and hands that she needed six weeks to recover; even then, she had to wear green gloves on her hands because the skin there was still too tender for makeup. At the very least, director Victor Fleming told Hamilton that they didn't need to reshoot the Munchkinland exit scene: the one they shot, the one that led to her injuries, looked just fine.
When Buster busted his neck
One of the silent film era's biggest stars was Buster Keaton, who was especially good at physical comedy. In 1924's Sherlock, Jr., Keaton plays a projectionist who longs to be a detective. He falls asleep in his booth one day and dreams he's Sherlock, Jr., the main character in a melodramatic movie called Hearts and Pearls or The Lounge Lizard's Lost Love.
In one scene, he runs along the top of the cars of a moving train. When he gets to the end, he grabs for a rope and holds on for dear life as the train speeds underneath him and he slowly descends to the ground ... except that the rope is attached to a water spout, and it soaks him as he lowers. The force of the water is so strong, it knock's Sherlock's head into a rail. Ha-ha, he got hit in the head! That, apparently, was not planned. Keaton experienced massive headaches for days after the stunt. Years later, he underwent a medical exam for an unrelated matter and X-rays showed that he'd once fractured his neck — evidently on the set of Sherlock, Jr.