![]() ![]() Neither of the men involved were angels - St. Clair died, Davis was sentenced to 30 years and their grieving relatives had to go through the indignity of the events being treated as a joke. It’s an extremely compelling nickname, but it kind of cheapens and trivializes the fact that a life ended and others were changed forever that evening - St. Clair, but due to his statement in court - including the sentence “I knew that that wedgie was out of line ” - he was dubbed “The Atomic Wedgie Killer” in some news reports. He insisted he had never intended to kill St. Davis claimed he had initially acted in self-defense, eventually pleading guilty to manslaughter. The official cause of death was asphyxiation and blunt force trauma. also might suppress their reporting of pain or injury after an exchange of wedgies.” Many more people might be hurt by wedgies than is recorded in medical literature - the paper’s authors acknowledge that “the exchange of wedgies is anecdotally viewed as an immature act or juvenile prank, without consequences other than possible gratification and potential retribution,” and that those who “take risks (including those inherent to atomic wedgies) for the sake of novel experience or to seek sensation. that she had stopped giving him wedgies.” As the paper points out, “His wife had been so disturbed. The paper explains that wedgies are undertaken for various motives - “a prank, an adventure or a malicious act.” The man took six full years to recover entirely from nerve damage, although there were positives to be taken from it. ” The man had lower back pain and numbness in his legs and toes after his wife, 16 years his junior, had playfully given him a wedgie. In 2017, doctors from Baylor University Medical Center published a paper about a 50-year-old man’s sore asscrack with the cheery title “ Wedgie-Associated Radiculitis in a Quinquagenarian. ![]()
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