MEXICO CITY — The mummy of 2 Australian surfers killed in Mexico delivered a transferring tribute to her sons Tuesday at a seashore in San Diego.
“Our hearts are broken and the world has become a darker place for us,” Debra Robinson stated, combating again tears. “They were young men enjoying their passion of surfing together.”
Her sons, Callum and Jake, had been allegedly killed via automotive thieves in Baja California, around the border from San Diego, someplace round April 28 or 29.
Robinson additionally mourned the American who used to be killed with them, Jack Carter Rhoad.
The beachside location the place she spoke, around the border from the Baja California town of Tijuana, used to be refuse twist of fate. She famous that her son Callum “considered the United States his second home.”
Robinson noted that her son Jake loved surfing so much that, as a doctor, he liked to work in hospitals near the beach.
“Jake’s passion was surfing, and it was no coincidence that many of his hospitals that he worked in were close to surfing beaches,” she stated.
Choking back tears, Robinson conveyed a final message that coincided with her sons’ adventurous lifestyles.
“Live bigger, shine brighter, and love harder in their memory,” she said.
Robinson thanked Australian officials and supporters there and in the United States.
While she thanked Mexico’s ambassador to Australia, she notably did not thank the local officials in Baja California who eventually found the bodies of her sons and Carter Rhoad.
Their killers dumped the bodies of the men into a well about 4 miles (6 kilometers) away from where they had been attacked at a beachside campsite. Investigators were surprised when, underneath the bodies of the three foreigners, a fourth body was found that had been there much longer, suggesting the gang had been working in the area for some time.
The fact that such killers are not caught or stopped in the overwhelming majority of cases in Mexico suggests that authorities allow killers to roam free and only investigate such disappearances when they are high-profile cases involving foreigners.
Robinson said that her sons’ bodies, or their ashes, will eventually be taken back to Australia.
“Now it’s time to bring them home to families and friends,” she said. “And the ocean waits in Australia.”
Prosecutors have identified three people as potential suspects, two of whom were caught with methamphetamines. One of them, a woman, had one of the victims’ cellphones when she was caught. Prosecutors said the two were being held pending drug charges but continue to be suspects in the killings.
A third man was arrested on charges of a crime equivalent to kidnapping, but that was before the bodies were found. It was unclear when or if he might face more charges.
The third man was believed to have directly participated in the killings. In keeping with Mexican law, prosecutors identified him by his first name, Jesús Gerardo, alias “el Kekas,” a slang word that means quesadillas, or cheese-filled tortillas.
Andrade Ramírez said he had a criminal record that included drug dealing, vehicle theft and domestic violence, adding, “We are certain that more people were involved.”
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Tuesday he had requested an opportunity to speak to Robinson and her husband Martin.
“This is a terrible tragedy and my heart goes out to them,” Albanese informed journalists within the Queensland surrounding the city of Rockhampton.
In 2015, two Australian surfers, Adam Coleman and Dean Lucas, had been killed in western Sinaloa surrounding, around the Gulf of California — often referred to as the Sea of Cortez — from the Baja peninsula. Government stated they had been sufferers of freeway bandits. 3 suspects had been arrested if so.
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