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Bocas del Toro, Panama. Scott Makeda's tropical haven becomes his personal hell. A serial killer pretending to be a therapist. A gringo mafia. A slaughtered family. Everybody knows I'm a monster. The law of the jungle is simple.
survive. I'm Candice DeLong. This is Natural Selection, Scott vs. Wild Built, available now wherever you get your podcasts. Hi, park enthusiasts. I'm your host, Delia D'Ambra, and this is the last episode of season two. Our time in the parks is coming to an end. There will be a bonus episode next week, and then we'll be done until next summer.
The story I'm going to send us off with is one that has so many theories, and I'll be honest, it's hard to keep track of geographic areas and names, but I'm going to do my best. Today's story is the case of two young women, Chris Crimmers and Lisanne Froon, who set out for a hike on El Pianista Trail in Boquete, Panama in April 2014, and were never seen again. At least, not all of their body parts were seen again.
To really wrap your head around this story and the nature area it takes place in, it's important to understand where Panama is on a map. The country is in Central America and is sandwiched between Costa Rica and Colombia. It's the literal land bridge that connects North and South America. It's home to the famous Panama Canal, which is one of the busiest waterways in the world and creates a vital link between the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans.
The city of Boquete is towards the west end of the country and is surrounded by thick, dense jungle known as the Cloud Forest, which houses hundreds of species of birds, animals, and plants. Some friendly, others not so friendly. According to U.S. News & World Report, the population in that area is made up of mostly indigenous people or people with blended Native American and Caucasian ethnicities who live in poverty.
There are pockets of villages in between large swaths of jungle and mountains, and those are the places that a lot of international travelers or aid volunteers visit to take in the country's raw natural beauty. What happened to 21-year-old Chris Kremers and 22-year-old Lisanne Froon in the Panamanian jungle seven years ago still remains an absolute mystery. But many believe their demise has all the telltale signs of foul play.
The question the world wants answered is did a predator in the midst of paradise get away with a double murder? This is Park Predators. On June 15, 2014, Luis Atencio and his wife Irma Mirando were bathing and washing clothes in the Calubre River near their remote village in northern Boquete, Panama, when Irma noticed something very out of place.
Off in the distance, near the far side of the river, she spotted a backpack lodged between two rocks near the river's edge. When Irma retrieved it, she realized the bag wasn't wet or damaged in any way, which seemed strange because anything that would have been left outside for a significant amount of time in that part of the Panamanian jungle should have been pretty tattered or deteriorated. Irma showed the bag to her husband and the two of them looked inside.
Neatly arranged in the pouch was a bottle of water, two cell phones, two pairs of sunglasses, a digital camera, two bathing suits that some reports describe as bras, a passport, and some miscellaneous plastic cards and cash. The area where Luis and Irma lived was near El Pianista Trail, but several hours north of the city of Boquete.
It's a spot where a lot of international tourists would hike in the jungle, and on a regular basis, visitors were notorious for leaving their belongings or leaving valuables behind in their haste to sightsee. After checking out the backpack and its contents, Irma and Luis knew that they couldn't hold on to the bag. You see, they had a strong suspicion that this particular backpack was related to two missing women that the authorities had been scouring the jungle for for weeks.
The couple immediately decided to hand over the backpack to local police. And to really understand why alarm bells went off for Luis and Irma, I need to take you back to three months earlier in mid-March of 2014.
At that time, two Dutch women, 21-year-old Kris Kremers and 22-year-old Lisanne Froon, had traveled to Panama from their hometown of Amersfoort, Netherlands, with plans to take a two-week Spanish course and volunteer as social workers in Boquete. In the previous months, both girls had moved in together back home and worked at the same cafe to save up money for their trip.
According to an article by Medium.com, the trip was a graduation celebration because Lisanne had just graduated from college the previous fall. According to news reports, on March 29th, when the women arrived in Boquete, ready to start their volunteer work, they were told that the Spanish school they were supposed to be volunteering at for the next month was not ready for them.
According to Dutch news publications, the school's administrator told Chris and Lisanne to basically kill time for a few days and then everything would be ready to go. So that's exactly what the girls did. They met up with their assigned host family in the village and started making plans to explore the jungle and surrounding mountains in their free time.
On the morning of April 1st, both women posted on their Facebook pages about plans to meet up for brunch with two guys who were also from the Netherlands and had been traveling through Central America. Newsroom Panama reported that after having brunch, Chris and Lisanne took a taxi to the trailhead for El Pianista Trail.
El Pianista is a popular hiking trail that visitors and locals walk often. It is in a dense jungle, but it's well-traveled or at least the first few miles of it is. The path's biggest claim to fame is that it leads to the Continental Divide, which is what separates the watersheds of the Pacific Ocean and the Atlantic Ocean. One side, water flows west, and on the other, water flows east.
According to a man who was working at an inn near the trailhead, he said he saw women matching Chris and Lisanne's descriptions hiking together into the dense jungle between 11 o'clock and noon on April 1st. By all accounts, the duo appeared to be in good spirits and had all the necessary stuff with them for a day hike. They were seen wearing comfortable clothing and shoes, and they had backpack. Alongside them was a scruffy dog everyone in town knew as Blue.
Blue belonged to the host family the women were staying with, and he had this pesky habit of following houseguests wherever they went in town and was often seen trailing behind hikers on El Pianista Trail. Needless to say, the dog was super familiar with the jungle of the Chiriqui and Boca del Toro provinces that the trail connected to outside of Boquete.
A few hours after the women and Blue left for their hike, it was dinner time, and the mother of the host family, a woman named Miriam, noticed it was getting dark and neither of the women had returned from the jungle. Even more strange was the fact that Blue had strolled back into town alone, unaccompanied by the young women. Alarm bells didn't go off right away, though. Miriam just figured the girls had gone out to experience the local nightlife and would come home the next morning.
But the next morning, Wednesday, April 2nd, around 8.30 a.m., a male tour guide from the town named Feliciano knocked on the host family's door. He'd been looking for Chris and Lisanne. He said he'd come searching for them because they'd missed an 8 a.m. scheduled appointment to go exploring.
When Miriam told him that Chris and Lisanne had not returned from their hike the previous day, the tour guide became worried. He knew that where the girls had gone hiking the day before was not that complex of a trail system. They should have had no problem finding their way home and would have known better than to attempt to stay the night in the wild jungle. In my research, I read that Feliciana was actually the first person to call the Panamanian police and report Chris and Lisanne missing.
He didn't do this, though, until 5 o'clock that night, hours after the girls were late for their appointment and he'd spoken with Miriam. It's not exactly clear why Feliciano and Miriam waited so long to report the women missing. But again, I think it's just that they weren't sure where the girls were and wanted to give them time to just show up.
By nightfall on April 2nd, authorities with Panama's Civil Protection Services Force arrived in droves and began searching El Pianista for the two women. This law enforcement agency, from what I gathered, was sort of like a local regional police department. They leashed up scent dogs and invited dozens of community volunteers to join them in scouring the nearby sections of jungle for clues.
According to news reports, during the first day or so of searching, nothing of any investigative value was found. During that time, Panama authorities alerted both women's families back in the Netherlands, and Dutch police contacted Panamanian officials to offer their assistance.
On April 4th, both Chris and Lisanne's families flew to Panama. They told reporters that up until Monday, March 31st, the day before the hike, the women had both been in contact with their families on a daily basis. On Sunday and Monday, Chris had spoken with her boyfriend, Stephen, and Lisanne had talked on the phone with her parents. During those conversations, both women expressed that they were enjoying their time in Panama and were excited to start volunteering at the school.
According to BBC News, on April 7th, after six days of searching the jungle, Panama's Civil Protection Services Force officially scaled back the search for Chris and Lisanne. They claimed that all the areas worth searching had been covered and no clues had turned up. At that point, the Civil Protection Services Force transferred the investigation to Panama's National Police Force.
News reports are a bit slim on what all was done investigation-wise by the National Police Force between April 7th and April 14th, an entire week. But based on what I read, they apparently didn't do a whole lot.
Because on April 14th, the national police officially passed the buck and handed the investigation over to Panama's public ministry department, which according to Embassy Panama, is sort of like the country's overarching national government criminal division. So the best comparison I can find is maybe equivalent to the U.S. Attorney General's office here in the United States.
Figuring out what happened to Chris and Lisanne was now the responsibility of Panama's complex case unit inside of the public ministry department, which was headed up by a female prosecutor named Betsaida Petit.
By the end of April, the Panamanian government wrapped up its formal investigation and publicly announced that despite not finding Chris or Lisanne's bodies, the government felt confident that the two tourists had gotten lost on their hike or fallen and perished in an uninhabitable section of the vast jungle.
Head prosecutor Petit said her office would still conduct some searches to try and locate the women's remains. But as far as what happened to them, the government believed wholeheartedly the girls were likely dead as a result of an accident. And for pretty much the entire month of May, that's what everyone seemed to accept as the likeliest scenario. Everyone except Lisanne and Chris's families.
According to a UPI news article published on May 27, 2014, both families were unwilling to accept that the girls had simply been injured and died in the jungle somewhere. Hans Kremer, Chris's father, told the publication that based on information they had received since April 1, the families were, quote, "...increasingly under the assumption there's a possibility of criminal intent," end quote.
The families demanded that Dutch police be allowed to aid in any further searches or begin a criminal investigation. Around that same time, both families offered up a $30,000 reward for information that could shed more light on the case or what happened to Chris and Lisanne.
Shortly after that article was published, a Dutch search team flew to Boquete and was allowed to join Panamanian authorities in searches for the women. In total, the Netherlands police force flew 18 people and 12 dogs to Panama to work the case.
According to Newsroom Panama, as soon as both women's families and the Dutch police force arrived, investigators with Panama's public ministry spread out and began looking for security cameras in the neighborhoods and commercial areas leading into town. Now, this seems like something authorities should have done during the first week of April when the women initially vanished, not something that was done two months after the fact. But according to news reports, that's exactly what happened.
To make matters worse, something else that had not been done prior to June 1st was aerial searches over the jungle. With pressure mounting from Chris and Lisanne's families, Panama's public ministry had to take a harder look at things. With no sign of the women turning up or witnesses coming forward to report seeing them in distress, the first people investigators turned to talk to were the two young Dutch men who were seen having brunch with Chris and Lisanne the morning before their hike.
According to an article by Dutch News, those men were questioned by police, but whatever information they provided was not helpful in figuring out what happened to the two women. This publication also mentioned that two other Dutch men who'd been seen in the company of the girls during their first two weeks in Panama were also questioned, but those interrogations led nowhere.
The first substantial clue that would break the case wide open didn't come until June 15th, when Luis and his wife Irma made their discovery on the Calubre River. Come on, jump! I don't know if I'll make it! Hurry! The floor is lava!
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Scott Makeda's tropical haven becomes his personal hell. A serial killer pretending to be a therapist. A gringo mafia. A slaughtered family. Everybody knows I'm a monster. The law of the jungle is simple. Survive. I'm Candace DeLong. This is Natural Selection, Scott vs. Wild Bill. Available now, wherever you get your podcasts.
Like I told you at the start of the episode, when Irma and Luis found the abandoned backpack on the Calubre River near Panama's border with Costa Rica, it had two pairs of sunglasses, two neatly folded bathing suits, again, some reports say bras, a passport, $83 in cash, a digital camera, and two cell phones inside of it.
Luis and Irma had heard the nonstop news reports about the two missing Dutch women, and they'd seen searchers scouring the jungle for weeks looking for anything that could be related. According to Dutch news, Luis immediately called a local rancher after he and Irma found the backpack, and that guy alerted Panamanian police about their discovery.
When authorities got a hold of the backpack, there was no doubt it had come from one of the missing women, because the passport inside of it belonged to Chris Kremers. Police were eager to get into the women's digital camera and the two cell phones, but they had to wait for forensic techs to open those devices and review the contents.
While they waited, they evaluated the backpack, and its condition stood out to authorities right away. Just like Irma had thought when she first found it, the bag seemed to be in remarkably good shape for having spent two months along a riverbank in the Panamanian jungle. It wasn't damaged or wet, and all of the contents showed no signs that the items had ever been in the water.
To many investigators, it appeared as if the bag had been left there recently, miles from where Chris and Lisanne had initially been hiking El Pianista Trail. Within hours of the book bag being reported, searchers found a pair of jean shorts not far from where the bag was wedged near the riverbank. Those shorts were determined to belong to Chris. According to Medium.com, authorities found 34 different fingerprints on the backpack and the items inside of it.
13 of those fingerprints were on the outside of the bag itself. Reports aren't clear if police determined if some of the fingerprints belonged to Chris or Lisanne, but I have to think at least some of them did. My question is, how many prints didn't belong to them, especially the ones on the items inside of the bag?
Three days after the book bag was found, Feliciano, the tour guide who'd initially reported Chris and Lisanne missing, was hiking in the Talamanca mountain range near the Calubre River. While walking, he stumbled upon something disturbing about six hours hiking distance upstream from where the backpack was located.
Tucked away in a remote section of the jungle, scattered not far from the riverbank, were several human bones with clothes on them and a boot with a fairly distinguishable foot still in it. This discovery quickly reignited Chris and Lisanne's case, and within a week or so, police officials confirmed through DNA that the bones belonged to both missing women.
Forensic experts revealed that 28 to 30 bones had been recovered. Many of these were from Lisanne's foot, tibia, and femur, but several were determined to be a rib and pelvic bone belonging to Chris. All of the remains were in advanced stages of decomposition. The pathologist said that Chris's pelvic bone was bleached by the sun, indicating that it had been exposed to direct sunlight for a significant period of time.
Because so little was left of both women, the pathologist couldn't determine a specific manner of death or even when exactly the two women had died. Right after the remains were found, a lot of rain and bad weather settled in the jungle, and subsequent searches for more clues, bones, or evidence around where the remains had been found were called off.
According to weatheratlas.com, the rainiest time of year in Panama is between April and November. It's typical for heavy rainstorms to come down in large bursts in the afternoon and evenings for days on end. From late June until mid-July, all search efforts by the Panamanian and Dutch authorities were suspended to keep searchers safe.
The discovery of the women's remains and confirmation that the bones did belong to them seemed to many people like part of the mystery was solved, except that it wasn't, not by a long shot. Chris and Lisanne's families felt even more certain that something terrible had happened to the women.
It made no sense for their backpack and belongings to still be in such good condition so far from where they'd been hiking if they had, like the government claimed, just fallen or been injured. On top of that was the fact that the remains were clearly body parts. The women's families were highly suspicious of how pieces of both girls had managed to end up together in a remote spot in the jungle, miles away from their backpack's location.
The public ministry of Panama's argument to this, though, was that the women's bones being so far from their original hiking path and their belongings was just more proof that they'd clearly been disoriented or something had happened that caused them to wind up downriver.
The government's theory was that one of the women had likely become severely injured and died, and the other woman stayed by her side and maybe tried to use the river to float to safety, but eventually died alongside her injured friend. Panamanian authorities said that over time, it was entirely possible for animals to scavenge the women's remains and drag off their body parts.
When the government made their theory public, they revealed that Lisanne did have asthma and an inhaler, but the inhaler wasn't found in the book bag or at their host family's house. So the government believed that was a possible reason Lisanne could have become incapacitated while hiking. It was their belief that she most certainly would have experienced shortness of breath from the altitude change.
To contrast the government's theory, though, was a Panamanian environmentalist named Ezequiel Miranda. He told Presna News that when Chris and Lisanne disappeared, the Calubre River was not flooded or swollen, which meant that the women could not have been swept away by a strong current or carried very far if, in fact, they did fall in or wanted to use it to float to a village for help.
Ezekiel told the publication, quote, the possibility that the river really dragged them is very strange, end quote. According to Newsroom Panama, on July 2nd, the country's head prosecutor, Betsaida Petit, traveled with her investigators to the Netherlands to meet with Dutch police and analyze the contents of the women's backpack.
Around that time, Chris's father, Hans, spoke to Dutch television stations and said that seeing cooperation between both agencies was encouraging. He said he wished it had happened sooner because both families still had many questions about what was going on with the investigation in Panama.
In earlier statements via a spokesperson, the families told media outlets, "...the hypothesis that they died after becoming lost is not definitive for the families, and we are still considering the scenario of a possible third party being involved. This stance is based on issues that have come to light in the investigation, for which we cannot give more details."
Chris and Lisanne's families wanted to keep looking for clues and possible proof that something criminal was at play. They told news reporters that they just wanted to find more of the women's remains to bring them home to the Netherlands and be able to say goodbye in a proper way. In mid-July, with Dutch police now working alongside Panamanian authorities, the agencies were able to extract some incredibly useful information from the women's digital camera and both of their cell phones.
Information that would once again take the investigation two steps forward, but what felt like one giant step back. Bocas del Toro, Panama. Scott Makeda's tropical haven becomes his personal hell. A serial killer pretending to be a therapist. A gringo mafia. A slaughtered family. Everybody knows I'm a monster. The law of the jungle is simple.
I'm Candace DeLong. This is Natural Selection, Scott vs. Wild Bill, available now wherever you get your podcasts. When police investigating what happened to Chris Kremers and Lisanne Froon cracked into the data from their cell phones and digital camera, they discovered both women or someone had been using the devices multiple times during the first week they were missing in the jungle.
According to La Estrella de Panama, the memory card in the women's camera showed that on April 1st, between 12 p.m. and 1.45 p.m., they'd taken several pictures of one another while on their hike. Most of the images were of them posing in front of mountains and climbing through rock scrambles along El Pionista Trail. They looked totally normal and happy, like you'd expect two tourists to be.
After 1:45 p.m., though, no other normal activity was documented from their cell phones or camera. According to La Estrella's reporting and the blog AllMystery, when authorities reviewed the call history of the women's phones, they found that on April 1st at 4:39 p.m., someone using Chris's iPhone dialed the number 112, which is the Dutch emergency 911 line. This call didn't go through.
Ten minutes after that, Lisanne's Samsung phone attempted to call the same Dutch emergency number and failed. Then, between April 2nd and April 3rd, both phones tried a combined five more times to dial 911. From April 3rd until April 8th, both devices showed multiple attempts to enter the pins to unlock the phones and check the strength of the cell signal.
The pins were incorrectly entered and the phones did not unlock. No actual calls ever went through after that, and eventually both phones' batteries died by April 11th.
When investigators examined the memory card for the girl's digital camera to see if any activity on that coincided with the cell phone data, timestamps on several images showed that seven days after the women were reported missing, someone used the camera to take 90 photos between 1 a.m. and 4 a.m. on April 8th. This would have been the last day the wrong PIN number was used on their phones.
Dutch forensic teams determined that just three of those images were clear enough to show anything distinguishable. All of the other 87 pictures were too dark or blurry to see anything useful.
The first of the three visible photos showed a rock in the depths of the jungle surrounded by low-lying vegetation. A minute after that image was snapped, the next image on the memory card showed a branch with some red plastic tied to one end hanging over a rock that looked like the same area seen in the first picture.
The third photo showed a similar area of the jungle as the first two pictures, but included an angle that revealed a small mirror and what appeared to be gum wrappers or trash littered on the ground.
Some investigators speculated that in the early hours of the morning of April 8th, the women had gotten so desperate to send out a distress call that they may have possibly been using the flash from the camera to signal a plane or search crew flying above the jungle, and that the small mirror may have also been used to signal for help too.
Authorities also studied the image of the trash from the third visible photo and speculated that the litter could have been spelling out the letters SOS, but in the end, authorities had no idea for sure. The evidence from the cell phones strongly indicated to everyone that at some point on April 1st, Chris and Lisanne had encountered a circumstance that prompted them to dial emergency numbers on their cell phones.
Whatever had happened, they clearly tried multiple times after that for another week to unlock their devices, check the cell signal in the jungle, and dial 911. What authorities could not figure out was what had happened to the two women during that week and why had search crews been unable to find them if they were still alive using their phones and camera. The answers to those questions never came.
Between September and December of 2014, Panama's public ministry officially closed the case and ruled both women's deaths as accidental.
The government claimed all of the evidence collected so far indicated that Chris and Lisanne had somehow gotten into physical trouble while hiking, and it was likely that one of them was incapacitated first, which prompted several attempts to dial 911. Then over the following week, after one woman perished, the other tried to use both phones to signal for help.
Officials said the mysterious images on the women's digital camera were likely their attempt to keep track of where they'd been or signal for help. In January 2015, Chris and Lisanne's families spearheaded another effort to investigate the case and search for evidence. According to Dutch News, a group of scent dog handlers, forensic anthropologists, DNA specialists, and criminologists went back into the jungle where the women's bones were found.
That endeavor resulted in no new information, according to news reports. As far as everyone in Panama's government is concerned, this case is closed and nothing is being done to investigate it more. But documentary filmmakers, authors, internet sleuths, and several online news publications have raised some really interesting theories that I think I have to tell you about. First, there's the obvious theory that the women were murdered.
In a multi-part investigative series, the Daily Beast reported that murder was a likely probable scenario as to what happened to Chris and Lisanne. The outlet said that it had obtained never-before-seen documents produced by Panama's public ministry, and those documents determined the women were killed by someone and the investigation at one point was considered a double homicide.
In the Daily Beast reporting and others, it was suggested that the women could have been followed on the trail and stalked by a serial killer. In that event, it surmised the pictures from the camera were not taken by either woman, and the cell phone activity was a result of someone else, most likely their killer, trying to punch in PIN numbers to unlock their phones after killing them.
The problem many people have raised about that theory, though, is if a murderer did kill the girls, why would he or she not destroy the backpack, cell phones, and camera? On top of that, if the killer was going to, say, keep it as a trophy or something, why then plant it by the river two months after the killings? The fact that nobody knows where the rest of the women's body parts are has also fueled serial killer suspicions and has led many to believe Chris and Lisanne were dismembered.
But according to news publications and the autopsy reports for the women, there was no evidence found on their bones that indicated they'd been cut up. Something that definitely supports a serial killer theory, though, is a report of another young female tourist dying in Panama three years after Chris and Lisanne's deaths.
According to the New York Post, in 2017, a 23-year-old woman named Catherine Johannet was brutally murdered on a hiking trail 35 miles away from where Chris and Lisanne's remains were found. According to the newspaper, the FBI is working that investigation and announced at one point that they uncovered potential connections to all three deaths but would not provide further information as to what that link was.
Other people have suggested that Chris and Lisanne's camera pictures and cell phone activity indicates that it wasn't their killer using those devices, but instead it was the women trying to signal that they were being controlled by someone or a group of people. That's where a theory emerges that perhaps Chris and Lisanne ran into drug traffickers in the jungle by accident and were taken hostage.
Several news outlets reported in 2014 that Panama's dense jungle was known to have pockets where illegal operations would take place near the border with Colombia. The problem is, is that Boquete, where the girls were hiking, is literally on the opposite side of the country from the border with Colombia. And El Pianista Trail itself was considered one of the safest areas in Panama to avoid suspected drug cartels.
Another theory discussed in the documentary Accident or Murder by Peaked Interest is that the tour guide, Feliciano, had something to do with the girls' deaths. According to that film, Feliciano was allowed access to the girls' room at their host family's house the day he reported them missing. The documentary says that Miriam, the girls' host mom, gave Feliciano the key to the women's room, and he was inside of it for 20 minutes before calling police.
There's also reviews on his website that Feliciano was known to be too friendly with young female tourists traveling alone. He was a middle-aged Panamanian man who had expert knowledge of the jungle and the Calubre River. There's also the glaring fact that Feliciano was the person to report the girls missing and discover their remains. But according to Panamanian authorities, Feliciano has never been considered a suspect.
which I'm not sure counts for much because the government thinks the women died from an accident, so who knows how much they really looked into him. In the end, what happened to Chris Kremers and Lisanne Froon in 2014 may never be known. And if there is a killer lurking in the cloud forest, they're most likely still hiding in the shadows of a wild jungle that refuses to answer the questions of a captivated global audience.
Park Predators is an AudioChuck original show. Research and writing by Delia D'Ambra, with writing assistance from executive producer Ashley Flowers. Sound design by David Flowers. All source material for this episode is on our website, parkpredators.com. So, what do you think, Chuck? Do you approve? Bocas del Toro, Panama.
Scott Makeda's tropical haven becomes his personal hell. A serial killer pretending to be a therapist. A gringo mafia. A slaughtered family. Everybody knows I'm a monster. The law of the jungle is simple. Survive. I'm Candace DeLong. This is Natural Selection, Scott vs. Wild Bill. Available now, wherever you get your podcasts.