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Updated 2025–2026 investigations into the 2014 disappearance of Kris Kremers and Lisanne Froon suggest digital manipulation and forensic inconsistencies, challenging the official accidental death ruling. Key evidence includes alleged tampering with the night photos, the permanent deletion of photo #509, and chemical anomalies on recovered bone fragments. For a detailed analysis of these findings, read the report on Medium.

But at night, in 2014, with a broken foot, a dying phone, and a camera flash that only illuminated the jungle’s darkness… they never saw it.

The case of the "Lost Dutch Girls" has since become one of the most haunting, frustrating, and debated mysteries in the history of internet true crime. While many aspects of the case remain speculative, one piece of evidence stands as a terrifying beacon: the 90 night photos taken on April 8, 2024—a full eight days after they went missing.

Location: A forensic imaging lab, University of Amsterdam.

For days, they waited. Their phones failed. On April 8, Kris, delirious with hypothermia, began taking photos. Not as a signal—but as light. She was using the camera’s flash to illuminate the shaft above them, trying to see if there was a handhold.