The night photos were taken a full week after the women vanished. Experts noted that they follow a specific, repetitive pattern: several shots of a landscape (rocks, foliage) followed by a close-up of a specific object.
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Kris Kremers (21) and Lisanne Froon (22) were Dutch students who arrived in Boquete, Panama, in March 2014. They intended to volunteer with children and learn Spanish. On April 1, 2014, they set out to hike the Pianista Trail, a popular but challenging path leading into the cloud forest. They were accompanied only by a dog named Blue, who later returned to the village alone.
These photos are heartbreakingly mundane. They look like the Instagram posts of any gap-year traveler. They represent the threshold of the unknown, the last moments before the pair crossed a point of no return. Investigators believe that after these photos were taken, the girls likely took a wrong turn, or decided to continue past the trail's end, venturing into the wild, untamed jungle known as "El Pianista."
Forensic analysis of the camera positions suggests the photographer (likely Lisanne) barely moved from a single spot while taking the majority of these pictures.
A and what appears to be a backpack strap resting on another rock.
The night photos were taken a full week after the women vanished. Experts noted that they follow a specific, repetitive pattern: several shots of a landscape (rocks, foliage) followed by a close-up of a specific object.
(Chrome, Firefox, Edge, Safari – any modern browser works). Kris Kremers And Lisanne Froon All 90 Photos
Kris Kremers (21) and Lisanne Froon (22) were Dutch students who arrived in Boquete, Panama, in March 2014. They intended to volunteer with children and learn Spanish. On April 1, 2014, they set out to hike the Pianista Trail, a popular but challenging path leading into the cloud forest. They were accompanied only by a dog named Blue, who later returned to the village alone. The night photos were taken a full week
These photos are heartbreakingly mundane. They look like the Instagram posts of any gap-year traveler. They represent the threshold of the unknown, the last moments before the pair crossed a point of no return. Investigators believe that after these photos were taken, the girls likely took a wrong turn, or decided to continue past the trail's end, venturing into the wild, untamed jungle known as "El Pianista." Kris Kremers (21) and Lisanne Froon (22) were
Forensic analysis of the camera positions suggests the photographer (likely Lisanne) barely moved from a single spot while taking the majority of these pictures.
A and what appears to be a backpack strap resting on another rock.