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kaggle-ho-015274House Oversight

Document describes a personal anecdote about a death pool game called “The Game” with no substantive investigative leads

Document describes a personal anecdote about a death pool game called “The Game” with no substantive investigative leads The passage only recounts a personal story involving Ken Kesey’s son and a casual discussion of a death‑pool game. It contains no names of high‑ranking officials, financial transactions, or allegations of misconduct, offering no actionable investigative leads. Key insights: Mentions Ken Kesey’s son Jed’s fatal accident.; Describes a long‑running death‑pool game called “The Game” with 125 participants in 2004.; Outlines the game’s scoring system based on age of predicted deaths.

Date
Unknown
Source
House Oversight
Reference
kaggle-ho-015274
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

Document describes a personal anecdote about a death pool game called “The Game” with no substantive investigative leads The passage only recounts a personal story involving Ken Kesey’s son and a casual discussion of a death‑pool game. It contains no names of high‑ranking officials, financial transactions, or allegations of misconduct, offering no actionable investigative leads. Key insights: Mentions Ken Kesey’s son Jed’s fatal accident.; Describes a long‑running death‑pool game called “The Game” with 125 participants in 2004.; Outlines the game’s scoring system based on age of predicted deaths.

Tags

kagglehouse-oversightdeath-poolpersonal-anecdoteken-kesey
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