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15 December 2025

Crazy World: Fancy a cuppa of 'Death Wish'?

An image of 'Death Wish' Coffee product. manufacturers claim it has 200 per cent more caffeine than standard coffee. (Image courtesy product's page on Facebook).

Published

NEW YORK: A US firm has introduced a caffeine product that it has termed as ‘The World’s Strongest Coffee’. The quirky name of their product 'Death Wish' will certainly get those addicted to their morning cuppa to try it at least once.

The makers of this coffee blend claim that their 'deadly' coffee contains 200 per cent more caffeine than a standard cup of coffee.

Every coffee packet comes with a disclaimer. ‘This is not your regular morning coffee. This is not your store bought coffee. You will not find this coffee at your local diner or at your sissy Starbucks,’ its disclaimer reads.

The firm has already got more than 15,000  likes on its Facebook page and some of the testimonies on its website includes statements like - ‘This coffee should be illegal…Thanks!!’ and ‘I’ve died and gone to heaven’.

The New York-based firm that is run by a coffee shop owner named Mike Brown is certainly not meant for the faint-hearted.

 

‘My grandfather is my father’

The case is as shocking for its contents as it is for one woman’s candid search for the truth.

A forty-two year old SB, a resident of Mumbai, launched a search of her true identity that has led her to discover that the man she knew as her ‘grandfather’ is actually her ‘father.

According to a report by Mumbai tabloid Mid-Day,SB has now escalated the case to the state’s highest court demanding justice for herself and her mother.

Mid-Day cites the petition, in which SB claims a man legally her grandfather, is in fact her biological father. She alleges she is the product of an illicit union between the grandfather and her mother.

SB says her father passed away in in 1991.

On October 16, 2012, she sent the grandfather a legal notice, alleging she was his biological daughter and asking him to take a DNA test.

Her petition before the High Court is slated for hearing on April 12.

However, relatives within the family have contested the claim, with an aunt quoted in the report as saying: “We are ready for a DNA test. She has alleged that her grandfather who is now 88-years old, tried to molest her. How is that possible?”

Mid-Day contacted the grandfather who is quoted in the report as saying, “I have nothing to say about the matter.” 

Girl tricked another girl into sex pretending to be boy

Justine McNally duped a 16-year-old into believing that she was a male as they dated online, the Sun reported.

According to prosecutor David Markham, McNally and her victim started their relationship when aged 12 and 13 and McNally, from Glasgow, lured the London schoolgirl into three sex sessions, promising they would get married and have children.

McNally’s secret was exposed by the girl’s mother.

The mother and daughter then confronted McNally, who produced a picture on Facebook of her dressed in pink clothing and heels, and said she wanted to have a sex change to continue the relationship.

McNally was sentenced at Wood Green Crown Court after admitting six counts of sexual assault.

[Home page Image via Shutterstock]