Search for 2 Australians missing in Mexico

Friends of two Australians missing in Mexico for more than a week are trying to check the identities of two bodies found in a burnt out van.

A supplied image obtained on Sunday, Nov. 29, 2015 of Dean Lucas (Left) and Adam Coleman.  (AAP Image/Facebook)

A supplied image obtained on Sunday, Nov. 29, 2015 of Dean Lucas (Left) and Adam Coleman. (AAP Image/Facebook) Source: Facebook

The discovery of two bodies in a burnt out van in Mexico has heightened fears they may be two Australians who've been missing for more than a week. Friends of the surfing tourists are looking to work with authorities in determining what happened to the men in the drug gang-plagued state of Sinaloa.

Dean Lucas and Adam Coleman were travelling from Edmonton, Alberta, to Mexico and had been scheduled to arrive on November 21 in the city of Guadalajara but failed to appear, Coleman's girlfriend, Andrea Gomez, told The Associated Press from Guadalajara.

The families of the two men issued a statement through Australia's Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade saying they were aware of reports that the men had gone missing during a surfing trip to Mexico.

The families added that they were aware Mexican officials had located the van the men were using. The statement said "a tragic event has occurred" and the families feared for their sons, but stressed that they were waiting for details to be confirmed.

Gomez initially said that she and Lucas' partner, Josie Cox, would go to the Sinaloa capital of Culiacan on Monday with items that could provide DNA for testing to see if the two bodies reportedly found inside the burned van were the Australians.

Gomez said that Cox arrived in Mexico on Sunday with Lucas' dental records and that Gomez had "pieces of dreadlocks" given to her by Coleman.

"Everything points to it being them because the van matches; it had a bicycle. But nothing is confirmed yet," Gomez said.

She later said that she and Cox would go first to Mexico City to contact the Australian Embassy rather than go to Sinaloa.

A statement from the Australian foreign ministry said consular officials were working with Mexican authorities to locate the two men.

The missing Australians who were driving Cox's van had been scheduled to meet Gomez in Guadalajara, she said. She said she and Cox put out an alert on social media after reporting the men missing.

Sinaloa, home of the powerful cartel led by fugitive drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, stretches down Mexico's Pacific coast and would be on the route of most road trips to Guadalajara from western Canada.


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3 min read

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Source: AAP



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