There's a story I remember, related to overvoltage:
Once upon a time, I used to work for a small company making power quality analyzers, transient recorders for mains fault analysis and the like. Every now and then, a customer came up with a difficult case and asked for help. One of these cases:
I a larger town in northern Germany, there was a landlord (rather a housing society than a landlord), that was accused by a tenant for all kind of electrical stuff failing due to problems with the power line. Lights sometimes went very bright and burned out (smells like a ground fault, but was checked by the local electrician). It's been a house with many flats, and only this particular one had this issue. We (my former boss and I) went there at least twice and installed one of our analyzers to record line surges etc. - nothing, except the analyzer failed at some point with a broken power supply unit

Other damages still happened. The housing society agreed to install a big line filter and surge suppressor for this flat - no improvement. We got a broken wall wart type battery charger (and a good one as reference) to analyze for the fault's reason (they ran the TV set off a lead acid battery charged by this charger to prevent damage to the TV set

). The charger was clearly damaged by applying mains power to its output (we tested this with the good charger and got similar damage)

Somewhat later, we got notice the issues were all gone - the tenant (a single mother with a juvenile son) moved somewhere else ... now it's up to you to guess what or who caused all the issues, we were never told officially.
Another story was about a failing telecom system in a large coal power plant - turned out to be sabotage by a bored employee ...