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Couple electrocuted to death making art hyped on TikTok, officials say

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When investigators responded to an April 6 fire at a Wisconsin home, they were immediately stumped.
The house in Marathon County, northwest of Green Bay, was badly burned and its owners were nowhere to be found. But once the blaze was extinguished, officers found two bodies in the garage — those of Tanya Rodriguez, 44, and James Carolfi, 52.

Firefighters suspected foul play, and Marathon County sheriff’s deputies started looking for clues to solve what they thought was a homicide case. Then, pathologists conducting the couple’s autopsies proposed a theory that changed the course of the investigation: that Rodriguez and Carolfi had died after electrocution from fractal wood burning.

Chief Deputy Chad Billeb confirmed the findings during a Thursday news conference.
“Foul play has been ruled out, and the deaths are found to be accidental in nature and believed to be caused by electrocution from fractal wood burning,” he said.


Fractal wood burning pairs high-voltage electricity and a chemical solution to etch intricate designs into slabs of wood. The process creates what is referred to as Lichtenberg figures, a pattern discovered in 1777 by German physicist Georg Lichtenberg while he conducted static electricity experiments. The intricate designs — often seen in the scars of people who’ve been struck by lightning — resemble tree branches, lightning bolts or ferns.


The results have turned fractal wood burning into a social media phenomenon. Hundreds of how-to videos exist on the Internet. On TikTok, #fractalburning and similar hashtags have garnered millions of views. Yet the aesthetically pleasing look of veins spreading across a piece of wood can come at a high cost — and in dozens of cases have turned fatal.
People trying the craft often pick apart microwaves or car batteries to remove the power supply, which is then connected through jumper cables to nails attached to a piece of wood slathered with a conductive solution of baking soda and water.


At least 33 people — ranging from rookies to experienced electricians — have died from fractal wood burning since 2016, according to the American Association of Woodturners. The group has banned references to the dangerous process at its events, as well as in its articles and publications.

“It only takes one small mistake and you are dead; not injured, dead,” the association wrote in a warning on its website. “Some of those who died were experienced at using the process and some were not. What is common to all of them: fractal burning killed them.”
The viral Milk Crate Challenge has left people injured. Doctors are begging them to stop.
The high voltage involved in the process pushes a flow of electricity that is “well more than enough to cause death,” said Lt. Steven DeNovi, an investigator with the Marathon County Sheriff’s Office. In the Wisconsin home, it appears to have also ignited a massive blaze.


Billeb, the chief deputy, said investigators had pored over dozens of videos about fractal burning once medical examiners posited it could have led to the couple’s death. After two weeks, the case was relabeled a “tragic accident,” he said.

Eventually, investigators concluded that Rodriguez and Carolfi were attempting the craft inside their garage that Wednesday morning. A disassembled microwave had served as the power supply.
The couple was electrocuted to death, and a fire burned the home after the pair had died, officials said.
“Taking advice from YouTube or any other social media site in order to do a craft … is not safe when you’re dealing with electricity,” Billeb said at the news conference.
“It’s very pretty, quite frankly,” he added about fractal burning. “But it should only be done by professionals.”

 
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I have a friend who does this. I've seen him do it. It is at the same time very cool, and very scary.
He has said it is dangerous (he is an electrician by trade).
I've got a piece he made in my office. They look very cool.
When he does it, you can watch the electricity burn it's way across the wood, creating these intricate designs. It's amazing.
 
I have a friend who does this. I've seen him do it. It is at the same time very cool, and very scary.
He has said it is dangerous (he is an electrician by trade).
I've got a piece he made in my office. They look very cool.
When he does it, you can watch the electricity burn it's way across the wood, creating these intricate designs. It's amazing.
Spouse of a colleague does this. He is a lineman. I’m not sure if I’ll share this story with her, he surely knows the risks as much as anyone.
 
I saw this story a few days ago and sent it to the guy I know. He knows the risks, but I wanted to remind him how careful he needs to be, since death is a possible outcome.

The guy I know uses a microwave power supply as well. If I'm around when he's doing it again, I will stand back even further than before.
 
I saw this story a few days ago and sent it to the guy I know. He knows the risks, but I wanted to remind him how careful he needs to be, since death is a possible outcome.

The guy I know uses a microwave power supply as well. If I'm around when he's doing it again, I will stand back even further than before.
I would be across the damn street with binoculars.
 
When investigators responded to an April 6 fire at a Wisconsin home, they were immediately stumped.
The house in Marathon County, northwest of Green Bay, was badly burned and its owners were nowhere to be found. But once the blaze was extinguished, officers found two bodies in the garage — those of Tanya Rodriguez, 44, and James Carolfi, 52.

Firefighters suspected foul play, and Marathon County sheriff’s deputies started looking for clues to solve what they thought was a homicide case. Then, pathologists conducting the couple’s autopsies proposed a theory that changed the course of the investigation: that Rodriguez and Carolfi had died after electrocution from fractal wood burning.

Chief Deputy Chad Billeb confirmed the findings during a Thursday news conference.
“Foul play has been ruled out, and the deaths are found to be accidental in nature and believed to be caused by electrocution from fractal wood burning,” he said.


Fractal wood burning pairs high-voltage electricity and a chemical solution to etch intricate designs into slabs of wood. The process creates what is referred to as Lichtenberg figures, a pattern discovered in 1777 by German physicist Georg Lichtenberg while he conducted static electricity experiments. The intricate designs — often seen in the scars of people who’ve been struck by lightning — resemble tree branches, lightning bolts or ferns.


The results have turned fractal wood burning into a social media phenomenon. Hundreds of how-to videos exist on the Internet. On TikTok, #fractalburning and similar hashtags have garnered millions of views. Yet the aesthetically pleasing look of veins spreading across a piece of wood can come at a high cost — and in dozens of cases have turned fatal.
People trying the craft often pick apart microwaves or car batteries to remove the power supply, which is then connected through jumper cables to nails attached to a piece of wood slathered with a conductive solution of baking soda and water.


At least 33 people — ranging from rookies to experienced electricians — have died from fractal wood burning since 2016, according to the American Association of Woodturners. The group has banned references to the dangerous process at its events, as well as in its articles and publications.

“It only takes one small mistake and you are dead; not injured, dead,” the association wrote in a warning on its website. “Some of those who died were experienced at using the process and some were not. What is common to all of them: fractal burning killed them.”
The viral Milk Crate Challenge has left people injured. Doctors are begging them to stop.
The high voltage involved in the process pushes a flow of electricity that is “well more than enough to cause death,” said Lt. Steven DeNovi, an investigator with the Marathon County Sheriff’s Office. In the Wisconsin home, it appears to have also ignited a massive blaze.


Billeb, the chief deputy, said investigators had pored over dozens of videos about fractal burning once medical examiners posited it could have led to the couple’s death. After two weeks, the case was relabeled a “tragic accident,” he said.

Eventually, investigators concluded that Rodriguez and Carolfi were attempting the craft inside their garage that Wednesday morning. A disassembled microwave had served as the power supply.
The couple was electrocuted to death, and a fire burned the home after the pair had died, officials said.
“Taking advice from YouTube or any other social media site in order to do a craft … is not safe when you’re dealing with electricity,” Billeb said at the news conference.
“It’s very pretty, quite frankly,” he added about fractal burning. “But it should only be done by professionals.”

We have several pieces hanging on our wall that our nephew made. He just graduated with an engineering degree from a top 10 school so I think he knew what he was doing. He certainly wasn't doing it with a deconstructed microwave but rather with "toys" a kid like that accumulates over the years crafting things in a shed he built in the backyard. Then again, maybe he's lucky.
 
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Are people in Wisconsin trying to dethrone "Florida Man" or have they always been the equivalent?
 
Are people in Wisconsin trying to dethrone "Florida Man" or have they always been the equivalent?
Let's put it this way, while Florida Man is more apt to die taunting an alligator, Wisconsin Man is more apt to die falling through ice trying to fish. Both colossally stupid in my opinion, but they both die doing what they love.
 
I can't see anyone doing that to a Les Paul, but I suppose there are people who don't understand the value of a fine instrument.

I assume they are mostly doing it on kit guitars which are pretty cheap and easy to find online.

To do that to a Les Paul you would have to strip it, probably damage the binding, reseal is but not as well as Gibson. Oh and be a monster.
 
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