On May 1, 2014, a Malaysian air force helicopter, carrying 21 people, including 16 Chinese nationals, crashed deep in the jungles of northern Borneo, Malaysia. The helicopter, a Royal Malaysian Air Force (RMAF) Sikorsky S-92, was on a flight from the town of Kota Kinabalu to the RMAF's Labuk Bay base. The crash was attributed to poor visibility and strong winds.
Rescuers used a technique called "hasty searching"—running along ridgelines to call out her name. On Day 3, a helicopter pilot named Kekoa spotted a flash of blue—her poncho—wedged between two boulders beside a waterfall. But by the time ground crews hacked their way there (covering just one mile in 14 hours), she was gone. She had been swept downstream.
The primary event associated with the "rescue from jungle -2014-" timeframe is the disappearance and subsequent search for Kris Kremers Lisanne Froon rescue from jungle -2014-
The most chilling evidence was a series of 90 to 100 photos taken on the digital camera in total darkness between 1:00 AM and 4:00 AM on April 8—a full week after they went missing. These blurry images showed rocks, sticks with red plastic tied to them, and one photo that appeared to show the back of Kris Kremers' head . The Grim Outcome
A flashlight beam cuts the dark.
On the morning of June 19, 2014, Amanda signed the trail log at the Pihea trailhead. Her plan: a 6-mile loop that should have taken four hours. She carried a light backpack with one liter of water, a granola bar, a plastic poncho, and a dead cell phone battery (she had forgotten her charger in her rental car).
This is where the story moves from a search to a legend. Amanda Hayes, a botanist, used her knowledge of the jungle to survive. However, she also made critical errors that nearly killed her. On May 1, 2014, a Malaysian air force
MIRA’S VOICE (O.S.)
She freezes.
Data from their phones showed multiple attempted emergency calls to emergency services over several days, though none connected due to lack of reception. Their camera also contained nearly 100 photos taken in the dark deep in the jungle, which have fueled significant public speculation and "true crime" analysis.