The dogs followed the scent until the river took it away.
That is the chilling claim now circulating around the murder of Ernst and Dina Marais, the retired Mossel Bay couple found dead near Crooks Corner in Kruger National Park. According to one reported account from the search effort, sniffer dogs tracking the couple’s route suddenly lost the trail near a muddy riverbank, close to the place where their bodies were later found.
At first, it may have seemed like the river had swallowed the evidence.
Now, that same riverbank may hold one of the most important questions in the case:
Were Ernst and Dina killed where they were found — or were their bodies moved there afterward?
Authorities have not publicly confirmed the sniffer-dog account. Police have not released a full forensic timeline showing exactly where the couple were killed, where they were moved, or how long their bodies were in the water. But the confirmed facts already make the river location deeply significant.
Ernst Marais, 71, and Dina Marais, 73, were found near Crooks Corner after disappearing during a safari trip in Kruger National Park. Their bodies reportedly showed multiple stab wounds, and their green Ford Ranger double cab remains missing. Police opened a murder and hijacking investigation.
The discovery site was not random. Crooks Corner lies near the meeting of the Limpopo and Levubu rivers, close to South Africa’s borders with Mozambique and Zimbabwe. Reports have described it as a remote, historically sensitive area where the terrain can help people move unseen across borderland routes.
That is why the alleged dog-tracking detail matters.
If sniffer dogs followed a scent to the water’s edge, investigators would want to know whether that trail marked the couple’s final path, the movement of the attackers, or the route used to drag or dump the bodies. A muddy riverbank can preserve signs for a short time: footprints, drag marks, tyre impressions, disturbed reeds, broken branches, or traces of blood diluted by water.
But it can also destroy evidence quickly.
Water can erase scent.
Mud can collapse tracks.
Crocodile activity can disturb remains.
Rain, current, and animal movement can turn a crime scene into a puzzle.
Some reports have said the couple’s bodies were found in or near crocodile-infested water after being stabbed, while investigators were also examining the missing Ford Ranger and possible escape routes toward Mozambique.
That raises a darker possibility.
The river may not have been where the attack began.
It may have been where the killers tried to end the evidence.
If the bodies were moved, investigators would need to reconstruct a sequence: where the couple were stopped, whether they were forced from the vehicle, where the fatal wounds were inflicted, how the bodies reached the riverbank, and whether the stolen Ford Ranger was then driven toward an unofficial route out of the park.
The vehicle remains central to the case. Public reports say surveillance did not show the missing Ranger leaving through official park gates, while tyre tracks suggested a possible off-road escape route.
That detail connects the riverbank to the wider manhunt.
A body dumped near water can hide a murder scene.
A vehicle taken through bush can hide an escape route.
A borderland location can complicate jurisdiction.
Together, they suggest the killers may have chosen terrain they believed would work in their favor.
For the Marais family, the question is almost unbearable: did Ernst and Dina spend their final moments near the river, or were they already dead before they were brought there?
Until police release forensic findings, the sniffer-dog claim remains unverified. But if true, it could help explain why investigators are looking so closely at the riverbank.
Because sometimes the place where a scent disappears is not where the story ends.
It is where the killers hoped the truth would.
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