New York Post

Weird BUT true

- Natalie O’Neill, Wires

Revelers at a sex party in Argentina thought men in police uniforms were strippers hired for a kinky performanc­e — only to learn they were actual cops raiding the place.

Twenty couples were busted for breaking coronaviru­s restrictio­ns at the secret swingers bash on a farm in Mar del Plata after a caller tipped off police.

He should have gone with 1234.

An early bitcoin buyer says he can’t access $240 million in cryptocurr­ency — because he forgot his password. Stefan Thomas, a computer programmer from San Francisco, invested in bitcoin years ago, wrote the password on a scrap of paper and lost it.

He has tried eight of his most commonly used passwords with no luck but says he’s “made peace” with it.

This drinking scene is truly undergroun­d.

A centuries-old cave used for storing beer was discovered under a community garden in Missouri.

The 30-foot-wide cavern — used by brewers in the early 1800s to store ales at a cool temperatur­e — was unearthed by researcher­s in St. Louis.

He’s so rock & roll. An Ohio man aptly named Nathan Rock gave cops a badass excuse for playing his tunes too loud at 1:30 a.m.

“You can’t play Led Zeppelin quietly,” Rock, 40, explained after a 60-year-old neighbor called the Erie County Sheriff’s Office to complain.

Rock agreed to turn it down and was given a warning.

Powerful kingdom? Nevermore!

A raven at the Tower of London is believed to have died — sparking fears that lore about the British kingdom falling will come true.

Legend has it that no fewer than six ravens must be living at the castle or a dark spell will be cast upon the kingdom. One of the birds, Merlina, flew the coop before Christmas and hasn’t returned.

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