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Yukon Men is an unscripted [citation needed] American television series aired on the Discovery Channel. It was produced by Paper Route Productions and premiered on August 24, 2012. [2] The series details the lives of several inhabitants of the remote Alaskan village of Tanana which is situated by the Yukon River. These men make their living by ...
Died (undetermined cause) 18 months 1956 Donald B. Anderson: 52 United States of America Anderson was a justice of the Idaho Supreme Court. [26] His body was found in his vehicle alongside U.S. Highway 30. His death was ruled a suicide. Died by suicide 1 day 1956 Peter Weinberger: One month United States of America
He died on 7 December 1943 at the Japanese work camp 131 Kilo in Thailand, suffering from malaria, dysentery and malnutrition. Official notification of his death was not received in Australia until nearly nine months later on 1 September 1944. [131] Died as a prisoner of war: About 2 years and 9 months 1942 Harold Ball: 21
Oklahoma City police are investigating what led a father to kill his wife and three of his children in an apparent murder-suicide inside their Yukon-area home.. The five people were found dead ...
Three planes crashed during the search mission; although all crew survived, the incidents reflected the dangers of the Yukon terrain: [6] On 30 January, a C-47, Air Force serial number 45-1015 from the 57th Fighter Wing , that had been participating in the search, stalled and crashed in the McClintoc mountains near Whitehorse .
A single-car crash that killed three Ohio family members last year has been ruled a double murder-suicide. Authorities say 33-year-old Nicholas Moler, an Iraq veteran who served in the Army ...
The Thursday afternoon shooting at a Yukon convenience store was a murder-suicide, according to police. Police investigating murder-suicide after 7-Eleven shooting in Yukon Skip to main content
Intentional traffic collisions may be a chosen method of suicide where speed limits are high enough to produce fatal deceleration. [2] Modern cars have high rates of acceleration and can easily reach very high speeds in short distances, while most cannot protect occupants in frontal impact collisions exceeding 70 km/h (43 mph). [ 3 ]