Parents mourn slain Australian surfers as bodies begin long journey home

A rescue team at the site where three bodies were found in Mexico's Baja California state on May 3, 2024. PHOTO: REUTERS

SYDNEY – The devastated parents of Australian brothers killed on a surf trip to Mexico urged well-wishers to use their memory as an inspiration to “live bigger, shine brighter and love harder”, as the pair’s remains began the long journey home on May 8.

Speaking from California, Mr Martin Robinson and his wife Debra said that the world had “become a darker place” since the death of their sons Callum and Jake, and their American friend Jack Carter Rhoad.

The trio had been scoring waves along Mexico’s rugged Pacific coast, where, prosecutors allege, they fell victim to a murder-robbery.

Their bodies were found in a clifftop shaft with bullet wounds to the head on May 3. Three people have since been arrested in connection with their deaths.

A Mexican judicial source said “the bodies have left” for a funeral home in Ensenada, Baja California, and will be transferred to Tijuana on the Mexico-California border for embalmment before going on to San Diego.

Speaking from a San Diego beach, Mr Martin Robinson thanked friends and family in Australia and the United States who have offered “overwhelming support” since the men went missing.

With the ocean at their backs, Mrs Robinson then struggled to read through prepared remarks.

“It is with heavy hearts that we share the news that Callum and Jake have been murdered,” she began, her voice cracking with emotion.

“Our hearts are broken and the world has become a darker place for us.”

She described Callum, aged 33, as a “lovable, larger-than-life character” who played professional lacrosse in the US, where he became known as “the big koala”.

Jake, aged 30, was described as a “happy, gentle and compassionate soul, who was pursuing a career in medicine” and had a keen love for surfing and cricket.

“They were young men enjoying their passion of surfing together.”

“Now it is time to bring them home to family and friends and the ocean waves in Australia,” she said, breaking down.

“Please live bigger, shine brighter and love harder in their memory”. AFP

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