If the PDF loads, you’ll see a single‑page thumbnail view of the entire set. Use the built‑in viewer to scroll through all 90 images.
The most baffling part of the case is the 90 photos taken within a three-hour window on the night of April 8 (roughly 19:00 to 22:00) in near-total darkness. The camera flash was used for all of them.
The mystery does not end with the photos. When remains were found—a pelvis belonging to Lisanne and a foot still inside a shoe, which DNA confirmed belonged to Kris—the bones showed bizarre anomalies. Some appeared naturally decomposed, while others looked "bleached," as if they had been exposed to chemicals. The shoe was found in a location that was hard to reach, a detail that baffled forensic experts. Kris Kremers And Lisanne Froon All 90 Photos
The women begin their hike around 11:00 AM. They reach the summit but continue past the "Continental Divide" into dangerous, unmarked territory.
In these final daytime shots, the environment changes from open trail to a more enclosed, wet, and rugged terrain. Their expressions remain calm, suggesting they did not yet realize they were heading into danger. The Silent Gap If the PDF loads, you’ll see a single‑page
During this gap (April 4–April 7), no photos are taken, but the Samsung phone logs are chilling:
Another frame shows what appears to be tissue paper or a plastic bag placed flat on a boulder, possibly another attempt to create a high-contrast visual marker against the dark volcanic rock. Interpretations: Accident vs. Foul Play The camera flash was used for all of them
The images suggest they were in a deep ravine or near a rocky riverbank, deep in the jungle.
Following the discovery of the backpack, search teams located fragmented remains along the Culebra River. A portion of a pelvic bone (belonging to Kris) and a foot still inside a hiking boot (belonging to Lisanne) were recovered.
On April 8, 2014, 90 high-flash photos were taken in deep jungle darkness by the Canon PowerShot camera belonging to missing Dutch hikers Kris Kremers and Lisanne Froon, showing enigmatic images of rocks, foliage, and a suspected image of Kremers. These night images, following a series of daytime photos and a suspiciously deleted picture #509, form a core mystery that experts interpret as either desperate signaling or evidence of potential foul play. For a detailed overview, read the account from All That's Interesting .