The deaths of two Australian brothers and their North American friend found with a bullet in the head at the bottom of a well in Rosario, Mexico, are a mystery. The three had met in the surfers’ paradise to ride the waves. The disappearance dates back to April 27th. Callum Robinson, 30 years old, had left San Diego: days earlier he had called his brother Jack, 29 years old, in Perth, Australia, telling him that a friend of his, Jack Carter Rhoad, also 30 years old, would be going with them. The three had booked hotel rooms online. But as soon as they arrived in the area they decided to go towards the beach. They take photos near the sea, post them, then disappear.
Only thanks to the rumblings of friends and relatives, and above all to the large community of surfing enthusiasts, have the investigations into their disappearance continued in a country, Mexico, where disappearing quietly is common and where investigations always stop without results. In this case, at least, the lifeless bodies of the three boys were found.
Nobody knows what happened to them. There remains an unanswered hole: who killed them? Why? The parents of the two Australian brothers, who always follow them at a distance on their travels, raised the alarm almost immediately. A friend reported him missing in Baja California on April 30. On May 1st, with the buzz of social media, the appeal to find them becomes news, followed by Australian and American newspapers. At first we thought it was a kidnapping. Some burnt camping tents were found in a clearing where the three boys had perhaps stayed, in the La Bocana de Santo Tomàs area. The bodies of the young people were found on May 3, 6 kilometers away in a 15 meter deep well, covered by some wooden planks.
The investigative hypotheses point to a robbery that ended badly: perhaps a group of criminals wanted to take their van. An argument would have arisen, which then exploded into violence. Three people, two brothers in this case too, and the girlfriend of one of the two, are accused of the triple murder. But there are still many aspects to reconstruct.