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Adults aren't the only ones who have caused some serious damage to a number of famous places and landmarks.
Kids have been known to be just as destructive — whether by accident or not.
We rounded up nine incidents where children were accused of ruining everything from a piece of artwork to a famous landmark.
Keep scrolling for some stories that are sure to make you cringe, no matter if you're a parent or not.
A child was caught on camera knocking over a $132,000 statue, and his parents are being asked to pay for it.
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Surveillance video captured footage of a child attempting to "hug" a piece of artwork during a wedding reception at Tomahawk Ridge Community Center in Overland Park, Kansas, in June 2018.
The statue, titled "Aphrodite di Kansas City" and created by the artist Bill Lyons, was worth $132,000 dollars. It fell to the ground after the child's attempted hug, and the community center has filed an insurance claim requiring the parents to pay for the damage.
A boy accidentally punched a hole in a $1.5 million 17th century painting after tripping in an art exhibit.
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A 12-year-old boy tripped while exploring a Leonardo da Vinci-themed exhibit at the Huashan 1914 creative arts center in Taipei, in August 2015. Footage from inside the gallery shows the boy reaching out to catch himself, but instead punching his fist into a $1.5 million painting that was on display.
The painting, titled "Flowers," was created by Baroque artist Paolo Porpora and dated back to the 1600s. One of the exhibit's organizers told CNN that insurance would cover the cost of repairing the hole, meaning that the boy's family would not have to pay for the damage.
A child reportedly destroyed over $1,000 in makeup displayed in a Sephora store.
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Sephora shopper and makeup artist Brittney Nelson shared a photo of an eyeshadow display that had been completely destroyed at one of the chain's locations in Augusta, Georgia, in November 2017. The display featured over $1,000 worth of Make Up For Ever eyeshadow. According to Nelson, the damage was done by a "small child."
Although she never saw the child actually wreck the display, Nelson told INSIDER that as she walked into the store, she passed a woman who was rushing her child out of the store. "The glittery footprints helped us decipher it was a tiny human," Nelson said.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider