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Photos from Creepy Videos's post 06/12/2026

On the afternoon of April 10, 2018, 16-year-old Kyle Plush, a student at Seven Hills School in Cincinnati, Ohio, went to the school parking lot to collect his tennis gear from his family’s 2004 Honda Odyssey. While reaching into the rear cargo area, he placed one knee on the third-row seat. Without warning, the seat collapsed backward, leaving him trapped upside down. His head became wedged in the rear storage compartment while his legs were pinned against the back hatch. His cellphone was out of reach in the front section of the van.

Using Siri’s voice command feature, Kyle managed to contact 911 at 3:14 p.m. During the call, he explained that he was trapped inside his vehicle in the Seven Hills School parking area. About 12 minutes later, officers arrived but were unable to locate him. While police were still searching nearby, Kyle placed a second emergency call and provided the vehicle’s make, model, and color. In a desperate plea, he said, "I probably don't have much time left. Tell my mom I love her if I die. Send officers immediately. I'm almost dead."

Despite the critical information Kyle provided, the 911 dispatcher failed to pass along the vehicle’s make and model to officers at the scene. After searching for approximately 11 minutes without finding him, police left the area. Nearly six hours after his first emergency call, a family member discovered Kyle inside the unlocked van. Investigators later determined that he died from asphyxia caused by severe compression of his chest.

Following the tragedy, Kyle’s father, Ron Plush, filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the City of Cincinnati. The case resulted in a $6 million settlement for the family. The heartbreaking incident also sparked multiple reviews and reforms, leading to significant upgrades in Cincinnati’s 911 operations, dispatcher training, staffing practices, and law enforcement response procedures.

06/12/2026

On the evening of June 10, 1981, six-year-old Alfredo Rampi was playing near his family’s vacation home in Vermicino, a small community southeast of Rome, when he accidentally plunged into a narrow artesian well. The shaft measured only 30 centimeters across and extended roughly 80 meters underground. Rescue workers later determined that Alfredino, as he was affectionately known, was trapped about 36 meters below the surface. The well had been excavated illegally, and the property owner had sealed it with a metal cover weighed down by stones, unaware that a child had fallen inside. A firefighter who insisted on inspecting the opening lowered his head into the shaft and heard the boy’s faint cries.

Early rescue efforts faced immediate setbacks. Responders attempted to lower a wooden platform for Alfredino to grasp, but it became wedged at around 24 meters, and the supporting rope eventually broke. A microphone was then sent down so rescuers could communicate with him while engineers dug parallel tunnels in hopes of reaching his location. Unfortunately, vibrations from the excavation caused the child to slip nearly 30 meters deeper. In a final desperate effort, volunteer Angelo Licheri was lowered into the well and managed to reach Alfredino, but he was unable to secure a strong enough hold to pull him to safety.

Italy’s national broadcaster, RAI, interrupted regular programming to provide continuous live coverage of the rescue operation. The unprecedented broadcast lasted 18 hours and drew an audience of more than 21 million viewers. For several days, much of the nation shifted its attention away from a government crisis and a major political controversy to follow the unfolding tragedy in Vermicino. After spending nearly 60 hours trapped underground, Alfredino passed away on June 13, 1981. His body remained unrecovered until July 11, almost a month after the accident.

Determined to turn grief into action, his mother, Franca Rampi, later established the Rampi Centre, an organization focused on child safety and civil protection initiatives.

06/11/2026

Geraldine Largay, a 66-year-old retired nurse from Brentwood, Tennessee, began a major hiking journey on April 23, 2013, alongside her friend Jane Lee. The pair set out to cover a lengthy section of the Appalachian Trail, starting in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, and traveling north. Throughout the trek, Geraldine’s husband, George, planned to meet them at various points to provide supplies and support. However, on June 30, while the two were in New Hampshire, Lee had to leave the trail unexpectedly because of a family emergency, leaving Largay to continue the expedition by herself.

On the morning of July 22, 2013, while hiking near Stratton, Maine, Largay stepped into the woods to use the bathroom. What seemed like a brief detour quickly turned into a nightmare when she became disoriented and could not locate the trail again. Around 11 a.m., she attempted to text her husband: "In some trouble. Got off trail to go to br. Now lost. Can you call AMC to see if a trail maintainer can help me? Somewhere north of Woods Road." Tragically, the messages never went through because there was no cell service in the remote area.

When Geraldine failed to arrive at a scheduled meeting point, George reported her missing on July 24. A massive search effort followed, involving the Maine Warden Service and multiple agencies over the next two years. Evidence later showed that Largay survived for at least 26 days after losing her way. During that time, she kept a journal documenting her struggle. One heartbreaking entry read: "When you find my body, please call my husband George and my daughter Kerry. It will be the greatest kindness for them to know that I am dead and where you found me - no matter how many years from now."

In October 2015, a surveyor working for a logging company unexpectedly discovered her remote campsite. Her remains were located inside her tent, still zipped within her sleeping bag. Despite the extensive search efforts, she had been only about two miles away from the Appalachian Trail.

06/11/2026

On May 26, 2013, the tugboat Jascon-4 was assisting with operations to stabilize an oil tanker near a Chevron offshore platform roughly 20 miles from the coast of Escravos, Nigeria, when a powerful wave slammed into the vessel, causing it to overturn. There were 12 people aboard, including 11 Nigerian crew members and a Ukrainian captain. Most of the crew were inside their cabins with the doors secured, a precaution commonly used in the region due to the threat of pirate attacks. Harrison Okene, a 29-year-old cook, happened to be in the restroom when the disaster unfolded.

Surrounded by complete darkness, Okene felt his way through the sinking vessel and eventually found a nearby compartment containing a pocket of air large enough to sustain him. Using mattresses, he created a temporary platform that kept part of his body above the water, helping him delay the effects of hypothermia. The overturned ship settled on the ocean floor about 30 meters beneath the surface. Trapped inside, Okene had no food, no drinking water, and no means of contacting rescuers. Saltwater stripped the skin from his tongue, while the smell of his deceased crewmates filled the wreck. He could even hear fish swimming through the vessel and feeding on the bodies.

Nearly 60 hours later, he heard a sound that changed everything—knocking. A recovery team from DCN Global Diving had arrived to retrieve the victims and did not believe anyone could still be alive. As one diver navigated through the wreckage, Okene suddenly reached out and grabbed his hand. Shocked to find a survivor, the diver provided warmth with heated water, fitted him with an oxygen mask, and carefully brought him to the surface using a decompression chamber.

Okene’s survival is widely regarded as one of the most extraordinary underwater rescue stories ever recorded. After recovering from the incident, he went on to train and work as a professional diver.

06/10/2026

On March 8, 2019, former detention officer Kirk Martin was taken into custody over allegations involving sual and psychological ab*se. Investigators said the ordeal started the day before when Martin allegedly used a spare key to enter his ex-girlfriend’s apartment without her consent. Once inside, he reportedly sually assaulted her.

Following the attack, Martin allegedly forced the woman into a closet and kept her there for several hours. During that period, she tried to de-escalate the situation and eventually persuaded him that they might be able to repair their relationship. He later allowed her out of the closet but continued restricting her movements by keeping her in the bedroom.

When Martin eventually left the apartment, the woman used FaceTime to contact her mother and urged her to call emergency responders. Officers arrived at the scene and arrested Martin. A booking photo taken at Murray County Jail showed visible scratches on his face, which investigators said were caused by the victim while trying to fight back and protect herself.

During an interview with authorities, Martin acknowledged that he had “taken things too far” and stated that emotions had intensified after the couple’s recent breakup.

In November 2019, he received a life sentence without the possibility of parole. Prosecutors introduced substantial evidence during the trial, and shortly after his arrest, two other women came forward with allegations of ab*se that reportedly dated back to 2012.

06/09/2026

On April 21, 1912, just five days after the Titanic disappeared beneath the Atlantic, a crew member aboard the recovery vessel CS Mackay-Bennett discovered the body of a young blond toddler floating in the icy water. The official entry recorded only: "Male - estimated age 2 - hair fair. No distinguishing marks."

The heartbreaking discovery deeply moved the sailors on board. When no family member was found to claim the child, the crew used part of their own reward funds to purchase a small white casket, arrange a funeral service, and provide a prominent gravestone. Before the burial, they placed a copper pendant inscribed with the words "Our Babe" inside the coffin. The child was laid to rest on May 4, 1912, at Fairview Lawn Cemetery in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The memorial stone was engraved with a tribute honoring an unknown child recovered after the Titanic tragedy of April 15, 1912.

For almost 100 years, the little boy's identity remained one of the disaster's greatest mysteries. In 2002, scientists exhumed the grave and performed mitochondrial DNA analysis, which initially suggested the child was Eino Viljami Panula, a 13-month-old boy from Finland. However, questions soon emerged when a pair of shoes recovered with the remains and later donated to Halifax's Maritime Museum of the Atlantic appeared too large for a child of that age. The footwear had also been manufactured in Britain rather than Finland.

As genetic technology improved, researchers conducted another round of testing. The results definitively identified the child as Sidney Leslie Goodwin, a 19-month-old English boy. Born on September 9, 1910, in Melksham, Wiltshire, Sidney had been traveling in third class alongside his parents and five siblings. Tragically, none of them survived the sinking. He remains the youngest recovered victim of the Titanic disaster.

06/09/2026

In 2009, an international child po*******hy network was uncovered when Robert Diduca, a hotel manager from Milford, mistakenly sent a photograph of an abused 18-month-old boy to federal investigators. Over the course of the next couple of years, investigators would identify at least 140 exploited children and arrest numerous men involved in the network. “Each new predator we put behind bars leads us to yet another person attempting to exploit children,” said the lead investigator.

One of those men was British born Geoffrey Portway.

In August of 2012, Portway was arrested under child po*******hy charges. Agents and state troopers investigating the aforementioned international child po*******hy network searched his home and seized computers that contained numerous images of child po*******hy and deceased children. There were over 4,500 trades of child s*xual abuse images between Portway and other men. He was charged with possession and distribution of child po*******hy.

Following his arrest, Portway pleaded not-guilty to all of the charges. However, it would soon be revealed that when Portway’s home in Worcester, Massachusetts, had been searched, investigators found a sound-proofed dungeon as well as a child-sized homemade coffin, a steel cage, a steel-topped table, butcher kits and restraints. These items had all been hidden behind two locked doors in his basement which had been lined with soundproofing tiles. They had also found a plethora of knives, handcuffs, s*x toys and castration tools as well as two large freezers.

A forensic examination of his computer revealed that he had been in contact with other men involved in the international child po*******hy network in which they discussed plans to abduct, r**e, murder and cannibalize children. These chats were accompanied with the men sharing photographs and names of children that they personally knew who could potentially become a target.

06/08/2026

Travis the chimpanzee was born in Missouri in October 1995. Just three days later, he was separated from his mother and purchased by Jerome and Sandra Herold of Stamford, Connecticut, for $50,000. Raised inside their home as a member of the family, Travis became well known in the community, appearing in TV commercials and frequently accompanying the couple around town. Although Connecticut regulations required a permit to own a chimpanzee, state environmental officials chose not to enforce the rule against the Herolds, believing Travis was not a threat to public safety after years in their care.

On February 16, 2009, Travis grabbed Sandra's car keys and wandered out of the house on his own. Sandra contacted her longtime friend, 55-year-old Charla Nash, asking for help bringing him back. When Nash arrived carrying an Elmo doll, one of Travis's favorite possessions, the chimp suddenly became aggressive. He launched a brutal attack, severely injuring her and tearing away her nose, ears, and hands while leaving her blind. Sandra tried desperately to stop him, striking him with a shovel, stabbing him with a butcher knife, and calling 911. Responding officers arrived and fatally shot Travis.

The attack left Nash with catastrophic injuries. Nearly every bone in her face had been shattered. Her eyelids, nose, lips, jaw, much of her scalp, and one hand were completely torn away, while the other hand was mostly destroyed. The trauma was so severe that hospital workers involved in her treatment were offered counseling services. She later developed an infection linked to Travis that affected her eyes and contributed to permanent blindness. In 2011, Nash underwent a groundbreaking full-face transplant. She was awarded $4 million from Sandra Herold's estate, while a later $150 million lawsuit filed against the state of Connecticut was ultimately rejected.

06/08/2026

Ashlee Martinson of Piehl, Wisconsin, is serving a 23-year prison sentence for the killings of her mother and stepfather. According to court records, Ashlee had endured years of physical, s**ual, and emotional abuse. The violence finally reached a breaking point shortly after she celebrated her 17th birthday.

On March 7, 2015, authorities discovered the bodies of Ashlee's mother, Jennifer Ayers, and her stepfather, Thomas Ayers, inside their residence. Thomas had suffered two fatal gunshot wounds, one to the neck and another to the head. Jennifer had been stabbed more than thirty times. Also inside the home were Ashlee's three younger siblings. One of the children had placed a 911 call. None of the children were physically injured, and they told investigators that Ashlee was responsible for the killings before leaving the scene. During their search, officers recovered a shotgun from the kitchen sink and a knife covered in blood resting on a countertop.

The Oneida County Sheriff's Department quickly launched a nationwide search and warned the public that Ashlee could be armed and dangerous. Not long afterward, she and her 22-year-old boyfriend, Ryan Sisco, were located and arrested when their vehicle was spotted along Interstate 65 near Lebanon. Investigators believed they were heading toward the home of Ryan's parents. Ashlee was later charged with two counts of first-degree intentional homicide as well as three counts of false imprisonment. Ryan was never considered a suspect in the killings and was released without facing any criminal charges.

Ashlee's oldest younger sibling, who was nine years old at the time, later described the terrifying events to police. The child said they were downstairs with Jennifer when two loud gunshots echoed through the house. Jennifer immediately ran upstairs to investigate. A short time later, the child followed and witnessed a confrontation between Jennifer and Ashlee. Ashlee instructed the child to return downstairs, and the child obeyed. What the child did not know was that Jennifer would soon be fatally stabbed during that encounter.

Afterward, Ashlee reportedly told her younger siblings that they were going to play a game. She gathered all three children and locked them inside a bedroom. Before doing so, she provided them with food and juice. Once the children were secured in the room, Ashlee left the house and disappeared from the area.

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