Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Details Emerge After Mobile Phone Kills Young Martial Arts Champion In Bathtub

Details Emerge After Mobile Phone Kills Young Martial Arts Champion In Bathtub
INSTAGRAM/IRINA RYBNIKOVA

Russian martial arts champion Irina Rybnikova, 15, died last Saturday in in the Siberian city of Bratsk while charging her iPhone.

Rybnikova had been using a cable to charge her device while she bathed.


Rybnikova died.

Speaking to reporters with Komsomolskaya Pravda, Rybnikova's older sister, Tatiana, revealed that the martial artist had recently been named godmother to her young daughter.

She said:

"My child adored her and called her 'nanny.' And now she is not with us anymore. Our hearts are torn up. It is so quiet and feels empty at home without her."

"She was a great person, the best and the most loved," a friend recalled of Rybnikova.

"She always dreamed of success in sports. We wanted to go together with her to another city and study there. Everybody loved her. She was sociable, kind and beautiful."

Another close friend said Rybnikova "dreamed of becoming a world champion."

Rybnikova was a champion fighter in pankration, a form of boxing and wrestling dating back to Ancient Greece. She won the all-Russian national championship two months ago and was selected for her country's national team.

Watch Rybnikova compete in this video.


Teenage martial arts champion is electrocuted in bath by her charging iPhone Mirror Onlin www.youtube.com

"A tragic accident has taken the life of our champion, friend, and student Irina Rybnikova, 15," Rybnikova's sports federation said in a statement.

"She was a candidate for Master of Sports in pankration, our beloved girl. Rest in peace."

The star athlete's death also swept through social media; the incident prompted several people to issue stern warnings, saying the tragic accident could have easily been avoided.



Reporter Victor Bolaños also lamented the nature of Rybnikova's death, saying that our connections to our cell phones come with "latent risks."

These risks don't unnerve us, he added, noting that we practically sleep on top of our phones when we get into our beds at night.

"Water is a good conductor for a current, this is why there was a short circuit when the phone fell into the water," said Yury Agrafonov, the head of the radio-electronic department of Irkutsk State University.

"If the phone had not been plugged in to 220 volts, the tragedy would not have happened."

A study conducted by FU Berlin between 1995 and 1999 on death by electrocution in bathtubs found 41 cases (31 of these involved hairdryers). 16 of these cases showed cutaneous marks, which are signs consistent with electric shock.

Signs of drowning were found in seven cases and two of these showed cutaneous marks, suggesting the electric shock did not kill individuals outright.

It could be "that the current stops your heart," Ian Lang, an electronic engineer, told Quora last year.

"It could be that the shock causes drowning, or it could be that the shock causes you to flail about perhaps slipping and hitting your head."

"Either way, it appears to be a rare phenomenon," he concluded.

"The best idea is to keep electrical appliances away, and in the UK you're not allowed any sockets in a bathroom."

More from Trending

Sean Duffy
Al Drago/Getty Images

Sean Duffy Gets Blunt History Lesson After Bragging About Trump Having 'Best Cabinet' Since Founding Fathers

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy was given a swift fact-check after he boasted on X that President Donald Trump has the "Best Cabinet since 1776"... seemingly unaware that the first Cabinet wasn't even appointed until years later.

Duffy shared a photo of himself grinning front-and-center while flanked by other Trump administration members, all of whom beamed at the camera. All of them gave the cameraman the thumbs up.

Keep Reading Show less
Pete Hegseth
AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post/Getty Images

Trump Administration Dragged After U.S. Military Shoots Down One Of Our Own Drones Over Texas

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has long emphasized the "warrior ethos" he expects from the U.S. military but now his leadership (to say nothing of the Trump administration as a whole) is facing criticism after military personnel shot down a drone operated by U.S. Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) on Thursday in Texas in yet another display of incompetence.

Lawmakers said that the military used a laser to down a CBP drone at Fort Hancock, leading the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to expand flight restrictions near El Paso, Texas. The reason for the laser use remains unclear, but it was the second such deployment in the area in two weeks, despite rules requiring coordination with aviation regulators.

Keep Reading Show less
Brady Tkachuk
Alexander Tamargo/Getty Images for E11EVEN Miami

U.S. Hockey Star Slams White House For Sharing AI-Doctored Video Of Him Insulting Canadians

There's a saying about laying down with dogs. Or, you're known by the company you keep. NHL player and Team USA member Brady Tkachuk is learning that lesson.

The Tkachuk brothers, Brady—who plays professional hockey for the Ottawa Senators based in the capital city in the province of Ontario, Canada—and Matthew—who plays for the Florida Panthers based in the metro Miami area—had already drawn ire online for being proud supporters of MAGA Republican President Donald Trump during the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics even before the disastrous locker room celebration with FBI Director Kash Patel after their gold medal win.

Keep Reading Show less
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (left) appears alongside a still from his toy-themed ad (right) featuring an action figure likeness.
Paul Morigi/Getty Images; @SecKennedy/Twitter

RFK Jr. Dragged After Sharing Ultra-Cringey HHS Ad Starring His Fake 'Action Figure'

The head of Health and Human Services just rebranded himself as a plastic superhero, and the internet has one question: Who exactly is this for?

Well, apparently, it’s on Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Christmas list.

Keep Reading Show less
Patrick Dempsey; Eric Dane
Samir Hussein/WireImage/Getty Images; Frazer Harrison/Prime Video/Getty Images

Patrick Dempsey Gets Emotional Talking About Late 'Grey's Anatomy' Costar Eric Dane

After a lengthy battle with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), revealed in April 2025, Grey's Anatomy star, Eric Dane, has passed away.

Since Dane's passing, his co-star and friend Patrick Dempsey has been open about his grief, as well as the grieving he sees in Eric Dane's fans. The pair played Dr. Derek Shepherd (Dempsey) and Dr. Mark Sloan (Dane) on the show together for over six years.

Keep Reading Show less