SpideySense
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That’s definitely the case with direct lightning strikes. Cell phones, watches, jewelry can melt because the air where the strike hits superheats instantly, causing burns on the victim’s skin, singed hair, and melted clothes/metal.BBM
Hi @Parsnip. I may have found the answer to your question! Since JG's phone was in his shirt pocket and is being analyzed by the FBI, per LE, I suspect it was not melted or burned. As such, this may derail the lightning strike theory a bit...
...there is a misconception that cell phones attract lightning, John Jensenius, lightning safety specialist for the National Weather Service, said. If someone is struck by lightning and they have a cell phone on them, it will usually melt or burn. People have taken that and blamed the cell phone, Jensenius said, but in reality it is unrelated.
https://www.accuweather.com/en/weat...-your-cell-phone-during-a-thunderstorm/328975
But I’m not sure what would happen if the person is electrocuted by ground current from a lightning strike. I guess the closest analogy might be, what happens to a phone in your pocket if you stick your finger in a light socket? Does it become part of the current and do its electronics “fry”? Or does it stay outside the circuit and remain untouched?
I don’t know the answer to that one.
MOO