She set up three surfers visiting Mexico to be robbed, investigators say. All were found dead in a well.
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She set up three surfers visiting Mexico to be robbed, investigators say. All were found dead in a well.
"The Baja California sate attorney general's office said in a written statement that the woman, identified as Ary Gisell Silva Raya, 23, pleaded guilty to committing robbery and vehicle theft with violence. Prosecutors said Raya admitted in court that she urged her boyfriend and the two other suspects to rob the three men. The victims were later found dead in a well after an extensive search."
"A Mexican court sentenced the woman on Wednesday after she waived her right to a trial. She was also ordered to pay $54,000 in pesos, an amount equivalent to nearly $3,000. Prosecutors said the court warned that the sentencing was related for the thefts that led to the murders and that she could face additional penalties in the case. Australian brothers Callum Robinson,33, and Jake, 30, along with their American friend, Jack Rhoad, 30 were killed during a surfing trip in Baja California on April 2024."
"State prosecutors said the killings occurred in a remote area known as Punta San Jose, about 20 miles south of Ensenada. An investigation conducted by the Mexican state attorney general's Specialized Prosecutor's Office in Crimes Against Life determined that Raya arrived at the location on the night of April 27 and befriended the men. She also noticed their valuables. Hours later, between 11 p.m. and 2 a.m. the following day, three thieves showed up at the site and robbed the victims before killing them."
Ary Gisell Silva Raya, 23, pleaded guilty to robbery and vehicle theft with violence and was sentenced to 20 years in prison for her role in the killings. Prosecutors said she urged her boyfriend and two others to rob three men who had been on a surfing trip in Baja California. The victims—Australian brothers Callum Robinson and Jake and their American friend Jack Rhoad—were killed and later found in a well near Punta San Jose. Raya waived her right to a trial and was ordered to pay 54,000 pesos (about $3,000). Investigators say thieves arrived after Raya befriended the men and noticed their valuables.
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