Baja California: How a beach trip turned deadly for surfers from Australia and US

entertainment2024-05-07 23:25:214522

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Two Australians and an American were doing what they loved on the stunning, largely isolated stretch of Baja California’s Pacific coast. Their last images on social media showed them sitting and gazing at the waves, contemplating the breaks.

What happened to end their lives may have been as random as a passing pickup truck full of people with ill intent. The surfers were shot in the head, their bodies dumped in a covered well miles away. How it unfolded was the stuff of nightmares.

Brothers Jake and Callum Robinson from Australia and American Jack Carter Rhoad had apparently stopped to surf the breaks between Punta San José, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) south of Ensenada, and La Bocana, further north on the coast. They were attacked there on April 28 or 29.

As soon as police arrived at their last known camp site, it was clear that something had gone violently wrong.

There were bloodstains and marks “as if heavy objects had been dragged,” leading to suspicions of an attack, the Baja California state prosecutor’s office said in an attempt to reconstruct the scene.

Address of this article:http://www.fidosfortywinks.com/3701/k-feldspar-mobile-cone-crusher-manufacturer/

Popular

Xi to begin Serbia visit on the 25th anniversary of NATO's bombing of the Chinese Embassy

Environmental groups sue Maine for action on climate

Trump's $175 million bond in New York civil fraud judgment case is settled with cash promise

Mystery as Camp Lejeune Marine sergeant, 23, dies in late

Man recreates 20

Storm relief and funding for programs related to Maine's deadliest

Apple takes down WhatsApp, Threads from China app store — Radio Free Asia

Satellite photos suggest Iran air defense radar struck in Isfahan during apparent Israeli attack

LINKS