Kris Kremers Lisanne Froon Night Photos Updated ((install)) 🔥

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.

The disappearance of Kris Kremers Lisanne Froon in 2014 remains one of the most chilling modern mysteries. Recent technical examinations and field investigations in 2024 and 2025 have brought new scrutiny to the famous "night photos"—90 flash images taken in total darkness between 1:00 AM and 4:00 AM on April 8, 2014 New Technical Insights (2024–2025) Photogrammetry Breakthroughs kris kremers lisanne froon night photos updated

“The camera did not lie. It simply recorded the last time anyone looked down.” In 2025, an expedition using photogrammetry overlaid night

At 1:00 AM on April 11, Lisanne turns the camera on. She takes one photo of the darkness. Nothing. “The camera did not lie

The investigation into the 90 night photos captured on Lisanne Froon

  1. April 1, 2:00 PM: They reach the Mirador, then continue onto the trail’s less-traveled north side, descending toward the Culebra River.
  2. April 1, 4:00 PM: Lisanne steps on a loose rock, fracturing the metatarsals of her left foot. They cannot climb back up the steep, muddy slope.
  3. April 2-7: They follow the river downstream, hoping to find a village. Calls to 112 fail due to zero signal. They ration food.
  4. April 8, 1:00 AM: Stranded on a rock shelf above a 20-meter drop. The moon sets. Lisanne is in severe pain (fever, possible sepsis from the fracture). Kris attempts to signal using the camera flash. She takes photos of the rock wall, hoping the flash will reveal a handhold.
  5. 2:30-3:30 AM: Kris, exhausted and hypothermic, sits against a rock (Image 542). Lisanne, now delirious, pulls out the iPhone. They take turns photographing their surroundings to map the ledge.
  6. 4:18 AM: Camera battery dies. They survive the night.
  7. April 9-11: Either a flash flood sweeps their remains downstream (explaining the scattered bones) or they succumb to exposure. The backpack, caught in a tree, is washed down by heavy rains in June.

She isolated the heat-map. The camera wasn’t pointed down. It was pointed up, at a steep angle, and something flat and wet was reflecting the light back.

: Meta-data analysis from recent investigations suggests the temperature during the first photo