Preparedness
Social Media Stunt Gone Wrong: Man Faces Felony Charges

An unsettling incident unfolded at a Walmart in Mesa, Arizona, when a man allegedly filmed himself spraying bug killer on food items, leading to his arrest. The Mesa Police Department (MPD) reported that Charles Smith, 27, was taken into custody after a “reckless social media post” showed him engaging in this hazardous prank.
The incident reportedly occurred on a Thursday evening around 8:30 p.m. Smith entered the store with the apparent intention of creating prank videos for his social media accounts. According to police, he picked up a can of Hot Shot Ultra Bed Bug and Flea Killer from the store’s shelf without purchasing it.
Smith then allegedly proceeded to spray the pesticide on various food items, including fruits, vegetables, and rotisserie chickens.
“Smith filmed his face, the pesticide can, and the act of spraying. He later posted the video online,” the MPD stated.
Although the video has been removed from Smith’s TikTok account, it continues to circulate on other social media platforms. In a recent video, Smith is seen tying a bungee cord around store door handles, telling customers, “You guys are locked in there, forever.”
The audacity of the act left many bewildered, as one observer noted, “This guy sprayed toxic bug spray on produce at Walmart, and then was dumb enough to post it on the internet.”
Authorities from the MPD and Tempe Police Department quickly identified Smith as the suspect. He subsequently turned himself in voluntarily. During a police interview, Smith confessed to both the theft and the act of spraying the merchandise.
“This incident underscores the potential dangers of reckless actions disguised as social media pranks,” the MPD emphasized in their press release. They also commended their officers and detectives for their swift response in resolving the case and ensuring community safety.
Smith now faces serious legal consequences, having been charged with a felony for introducing poison, along with three misdemeanors: criminal damage, endangerment, and theft.
In response to the incident, a Walmart spokesperson informed AZ Family that all affected products were removed, and the impacted area of the store was thoroughly sanitized.
Let us know what you think, please share your thoughts in the comments below.
Preparedness
Smart Person’s Checklist: 10 Things You’ll Wish You Had When Disaster Strikes
Because peace of mind beats panic every time
When a big storm’s coming, the news spreads fast. Shelves empty, gas stations fill up, and suddenly everyone’s buying bottled water like it’s gold. The truth is, once panic buying starts, it’s already too late. Real preparedness isn’t about fear it’s about peace of mind. The best time to get ready is when things still feel normal.
Here are ten simple, affordable items you can stock quietly now so you’re not scrambling later.
1. Water and Water Filters
Start with the basics: one gallon per person per day for at least three days. Keep bottled water handy, but also grab a small filter straw or purification tablets for backup. Clean water matters more than anything else when supplies run short.
2. Non-Perishable Food
You don’t need fancy freeze-dried meals. A few weeks’ worth of canned goods, rice, oats, peanut butter, and protein bars go a long way. Choose foods you actually eat, rotate them out as part of your normal pantry.
3. First-Aid Kit and Medications
Every home needs one. Bandages, antiseptic, gloves, and basic medicines like pain relievers and allergy pills can make a huge difference. If you take prescription medication, try to keep at least a few extra days’ supply on hand.
4. Flashlights and Extra Batteries
When the power goes out, light is everything. Stock a few small LED flashlights and a headlamp for hands-free use. Don’t forget extra batteries or a crank-powered option that never needs charging.
5. Portable Charger or Power Bank
Phones are lifelines during emergencies. Keep a charged power bank in your bag or car. Solar versions are great backups if you’re stuck without power for days.
6. Trash Bags and Zip Ties
Sounds simple, but trash bags are a survival essential. They can collect waste, store supplies, or even serve as ponchos or tarps. Pair them with a handful of zip ties one of the most underrated tools for securing gear or sealing openings.
7. Manual Can Opener
If your food storage depends on cans, make sure you can open them without electricity. A sturdy manual can opener can save you a lot of frustration (and hungry hours).
8. Multi-Tool or Pocket Knife
A good multi-tool replaces an entire toolbox in an emergency. Cutting rope, fixing leaks, opening packages you’ll use it more often than you think.
9. Basic Hygiene Supplies
Soap, toothbrushes, wet wipes, and feminine products often get overlooked. Staying clean keeps morale up and illness down, especially when running water isn’t guaranteed.
10. Emergency Cash
If card readers go down, cash is still king. Keep small bills in a waterproof envelope somewhere safe but easy to grab.
Final Thought
Preparedness isn’t about hoarding or panic, it’s about independence and calm. When something unexpected happens, the people who’ve planned ahead are the ones helping others instead of fighting for supplies.
📝 Starter Supply Checklist
☑ Water (1 gallon per person per day)
☑ Food for 3–7 days
☑ First-aid kit and medicines
☑ Flashlights + batteries
☑ Power bank or solar charger
☑ Trash bags + zip ties
☑ Manual can opener
☑ Multi-tool or knife
☑ Hygiene essentials
☑ Small cash reserve
Off The Grid
10 Survival Items Hiding in Your House Right Now
Your kitchen drawer might just be the best survival kit you never built
You don’t need to live in the wilderness or have a fancy bug-out bag to be prepared for an emergency. Most people already own half the tools they’d need to survive they’re just scattered across kitchen drawers, garages, and bathroom cabinets. The secret is knowing what you have and how to use it creatively. Here are ten everyday items that can turn into life-saving tools when things go sideways.
1. Garbage Bags
A simple trash bag can do more than hold waste. Use it as a rain poncho, emergency shelter, ground tarp, or even a water collector. Heavy-duty contractor bags can be stuffed with leaves for insulation or turned into makeshift sleeping bags.
2. Aluminum Foil
Foil is basically metal in your pocket. Wrap it around food to cook over open flame, fashion it into a bowl or wind guard, or use it to reflect heat toward your shelter. You can even fold a small square into a mirror for signaling.
3. Shoelaces
Strong, lightweight, and easy to find. Shoelaces can tie gear, hang food from trees, fix broken zippers, or become makeshift tourniquets. In survival situations, cordage is priceless and you’re probably wearing some right now.
4. Bleach
Unassuming but powerful, regular unscented bleach can disinfect surfaces and purify water. Add just 8 drops per gallon of clear water, mix well, and wait 30 minutes. (If it smells faintly of chlorine afterward, it’s safe to drink.)
5. Coffee Filters
Coffee filters aren’t just for caffeine lovers. They make excellent pre-filters for dirty water, help start fires when dry, and can even work as disposable plates or wound covers. Lightweight and cheap, they’re worth tossing in any emergency bag.
6. Duct Tape
If something’s broken, duct tape can probably fix it. Patch holes, secure splints, seal windows, or twist it into rope. It’s waterproof, durable, and compact a survival MVP in any scenario.
7. Plastic Bottles
Empty water bottles are more useful than they look. Use them to carry and purify water, as makeshift funnels, or to store dry goods. Fill one with water and set it in sunlight for a few hours the UV rays can kill bacteria naturally.
8. Vaseline and Cotton Balls
Together, they’re an instant fire starter. Coat a few cotton balls in petroleum jelly and store them in a small bag. Even in rain, they’ll ignite easily and burn long enough to get a fire going.
9. Paper Clips
A tiny metal multitool. Paper clips can pick locks, fix zippers, clean small gear, or act as hooks and fish lures. They’re proof that even office supplies can have survival value.
10. Hand Sanitizer
Besides keeping your hands germ-free, sanitizer with alcohol doubles as fire fuel. A small squeeze on kindling makes damp wood catch flame faster. Keep a travel bottle in your car or pocket, it’s hygiene and ignition in one.
Final Thought
Survival isn’t about buying gear it’s about using what’s already around you. The next time you open a junk drawer, look again. You might not see a mess; you might see a ready-made emergency kit hiding in plain sight. Being resourceful isn’t just thrifty, it’s one of the best survival skills you’ll ever have.
Preparedness
Your Phone Is Dead. Now What? Staying Connected When Tech Fails
It’s almost hard to imagine life without your phone. It’s your map, flashlight, camera, clock, and your link to everyone you care about. But imagine this: a long power outage, a road trip gone wrong, or a massive storm that knocks out towers and Wi-Fi. Suddenly that tiny glowing screen in your hand turns black and so does your sense of direction.
When your phone dies, it’s not just inconvenient. It can make you feel lost and cut off. But you can still stay connected and in control if you know a few old-school, low-tech tricks.
1. Go Old School: Know How to Use a Map and Compass
GPS has made traditional navigation a lost art, but it’s one of the most valuable survival skills you can learn. Keep a paper map of your local area or the places you travel often printed maps never run out of battery.
Learn to read topography lines, landmarks, and road grids. A basic compass is cheap and reliable. Even without one, you can find direction using the sun (it rises in the east, sets in the west) or at night by locating the North Star. Knowing these simple things can help you walk to safety when your phone can’t guide you.
2. Keep a Backup Way to Communicate
You don’t need a cell signal to reach people. A hand-crank or battery-powered radio can pick up local broadcasts for updates and weather alerts. For person-to-person contact, two-way radios (walkie-talkies) still work great over short distances they’re affordable and don’t rely on towers.
In group situations, establish meeting points ahead of time. If you’re separated, everyone should know where to regroup. Simple, clear planning beats panic every time.
3. Create a “No-Tech Contact Tree”
If your phone dies, do you actually know anyone’s phone number by heart? Most of us don’t anymore. Write down key contacts family, friends, doctors, and emergency numbers on a small card and keep it in your wallet or car.
Create a quick “contact tree” on paper: who to call, who they’ll contact next, and where to meet if lines are down. It doesn’t need to be fancy; even a handwritten plan keeps communication flowing when technology doesn’t.
4. Use Signals and Landmarks
If you can’t talk or text, visibility becomes your language. Bright colors, mirrors, or flashlights can signal for help during the day or night. Three short flashes of light, three blasts on a whistle, or three knocks on a wall, all are standard distress signals.
Learn to identify major landmarks like rivers, bridges, or towers. They help rescuers find you and guide you to safety.
5. Power Smart When You Can
If you get a chance to recharge, make it count. Keep a small power bank charged and ready in your bag or car. Switch your phone to airplane mode, lower brightness, and close background apps to stretch every percent of battery life.
Final Thought
Technology is amazing until it isn’t. Losing your phone doesn’t have to mean losing your sense of connection or safety. Real independence comes from knowing what to do when the tools fail. Think of it as digital detox with a survival twist: when the world goes quiet, the smartest thing you can do is stay calm, use your head, and rely on skills that don’t need a signal to work.
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Joan
January 1, 2025 at 1:34 pm
Parents, social media and lack of harsh penalties are the cause of this sort of things. Children are brought up to think about themselves and know there are no consequences for their actions. It on video. Rush it through the system. No 2 or 3 years. Immediately. It is on film. The person is guilty. There is no alleged. He goes to jail and he still has to pay for everything he destroyed. If he cannot pay his immediate family is responsible. There has to be consequences.
Festus
January 1, 2025 at 2:03 pm
Force him to eat food sprayed with same insecticide on social media. Maybe the idiots would get the hint
william l bryant
January 1, 2025 at 6:24 pm
What the h-ll does gun control have to do with this incident!, charge him with attempted murder and send him to prison for 20 years
Eruadan
January 1, 2025 at 9:14 pm
Actually, this is just pure product tampering. If someone were to pick up some of the produce without realizing what had been done, there could be really serious consequences.
Anyone remember several years ago in the Pacific Northwest where some members of a cult who were unhappy with the way the citizens of the area felt about them went into a number of stores, and I think even a few buffets, and sprayed some type of chemical on the produce and or salad components? I think a couple of folks even died because of that.
This is no joke to the consumers or medical professionals who have no idea what they are faced with in the ER.
I won’t say more laws, because we have enough to deal with these behaviors already. They just need to be _enforced_. Strictly.
Eruadan
CPO Bill
January 2, 2025 at 2:41 pm
Feed him turds!
RC
January 5, 2025 at 8:43 am
He needs to be given the longest prison sentence possible. It doesn’t make any difference if he turned himself in or not. Someone could have easily died – he’s just damned lucky that they didn’t. There are too many s***-for- brains out there who seem to find humor in creating danger for others. It’s time to teach them all a lesson on just how humorous it really is.
Al Bag Daddi
January 11, 2025 at 10:59 pm
Make him eat food spayed with that poison. Dumass.