The heartbroken partner of one of the two Perth brothers murdered in Mexico has shared a moving tribute to her boyfriend six months after his death.
Emily Horwath, Callum Robinson’s American partner, shared a series of photos of the time she spent with Callum’s parents on Monday.
Callum, 33, his brother Jake, 30, and their American friend Jack Carter Rhoad, 30, died in an alleged botched carjacking while they were on a surfing trip near Ensenada in Baja California on the northwest coast from Mexico, in April.
Ms Horwath’s first photo was a loving photo of the couple with the caption: “Six months without you, I miss you endlessly.”
Other photos were shared of the American’s time spent with the Robinsons’ parents in Perth, Martin and Debra, during the Hawaii Lacrosse Tournament.
Callum had played professional lacrosse in the US top division and represented Australia at the world championship.
In another post she could be seen doing a ‘shoey’, a popular Australian tradition, with a sports boot, insisting she could only do it for Callum.
He also reposted a touching video of Lacrosse players standing shoulder to shoulder in the shape of a heart with a number 10 in the center paying tribute to their teammate.
Emily Horwath has shared a series of touching tributes to her boyfriend Callum Robinson six months after his death.
Mrs. Howarth and the Robinsons at a lacrosse tournament in Hawaii where Callum played
Howarth shared an image drinking a ‘shoey’ in memory of her Australian boyfriend
The parents told Nine News last month that they “don’t have a family anymore”.
“We had these dreams, like all parents do with their children,” Mr. Robinson said.
“Now they’re not going to happen and we have to readjust to that, to the fact that we don’t have a family anymore.”
“We miss them so much,” Mrs. Robinson said.
Jake and Callum were surfing and camping with Rhoad on a particularly remote stretch of the Baja coast earlier this year.
Authorities were alerted to his disappearance after the discovery of his burned white Chevrolet Colorado near the small town of Santo Tomás, according to police evidence presented to the Ensenada Attorney General’s Office.
Their family raised the alarm when they didn’t check into an Airbnb days before.
At their camp, police collected alleged evidence, including tent poles, gun casings, plastic gallon bottles, blood stains and drag marks, in the area where they were allegedly camping.
Days later, their bodies were pulled from a 15-meter-deep well in a secluded area near their camp. An effort that took local authorities more than 12 hours to complete.
Both Callum and Jack were passionate surfers and loving fathers before they were murdered in Mexico.
Authorities found the burned shell of the children’s Colorado pickup truck, leading to the investigation into their disappearance.
Authorities descended into a deep well to recover the bodies of the Robinsons and Mr. Rhoades.
The defendants appeared before a Mexican court in May for the alleged murder of the three men.
In May, Jesús Gerardo ‘N’ appeared before a Mexican court where the judge read the State’s case after his investigations.
The defendant’s then-girlfriend, Ari Gisell, has reportedly become a witness in the prosecution’s case.
Ari alleged that her then-boyfriend admitted to killing the men earlier; prosecutors also allege that he showed her new tires on his own car that he had lifted off the Australians’ vehicle.
The Attorney General’s office issued a statement after the hearing alleging that men, including the defendant, approached the surfers with the goal of stealing their car.
‘They were surprised by Jesús Gerardo ‘N’, and other people with the intention of stealing their vehicle and due to the reaction of the victims, they were murdered,’ the statement reads.