“THEY TOOK IT OFF HER D3AD B0DY!” A crucial eyewitness just revealed exactly what rogue workers did to 21-year-old Maria Eduarda seconds after her 130ft fall—and the sheer cold-bloodedness of it is breaking the internet… 🚨📹

The horrifying tragedy of a physical education student being thrown off Brazil’s “Skeleton Bridge” without a single safety line attached was already sickening. But an explosive new eyewitness statement from an educator standing right in the jump queue has completely destroyed any lingering belief that this was “just an accident.”

While Maria lay shattered on the ground below, witnesses say an operator’s first instinct wasn’t to perform CPR or call an ambulance—it was to systematically strip a GoPro camera right off her body. As police confirm that the crucial device has mysteriously vanished from the crime scene, a sinister question is demanding an answer: What terrifying final realization did that camera capture on the platform before they pushed her into the void?

The shocking details of the alleged cover-up, the frantic gear-swapping, and the exact digital evidence they tried to bury forever are exposed inside. 👇🔥

The ongoing investigation into the horrifying death of a 21-year-old Brazilian student has violently shifted from a case of staggering incompetence to a full-blown criminal conspiracy. Bombshell testimonies from key eyewitnesses at the scene have revealed that immediately after Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas was flung to her death without a safety rope, the uncertified operators prioritized stripping recording equipment from her body over saving her life.

The chilling developments have completely upended the defense strategy of the three detained instructors—Maicon Fernandes Cintra, 42, Luis Felipe Feliciano Egoroff, 32, and Vitor de Freitas Gonçalves, 27—who are currently held without bail under charges of homicide with implied malice (dolo eventual).

The tragedy occurred on Saturday, June 13, at the infamous Ponte do Esqueleto (“Skeleton Bridge”) in Limeira, São Paulo. Maria, an ambitious physical education student, was participating in a rogue “rope-jumping” event. A viral video captured the absolute horror of the moment: two instructors hoisted Maria into the air for a specialized “airplane-style” launch, throwing her into a 40-meter abyss while the heavy safety line remained completely unattached, sitting loose on the wooden deck.

‘Worried About Hiding Evidence’

While public outrage focused heavily on the initial mistake, harrowing new details from those waiting in line to jump suggest a calculated effort to suppress evidence began the second Maria hit the ground.

Rafael Goulart, a school pedagogical coordinator who was next in line to take the plunge, recounted the grim scene to local networks. According to Goulart, immediately after Maria struck the ravine below, a member of the rogue staff rushed down to the body.

"The first scene I remember... was seeing one of the employees removing the strap from her neck, from the body that was already on the ground, taking the 'GoPro' camera. They were either worried about hiding evidence or simply worried about the financial value of the equipment."

– Rafael Goulart, pedagogical coordinator and eyewitness

Goulart further noted that the staff members exhibited zero emotion or panic regarding the girl’s physical state, describing them as being in a “catatonic state,” entirely focused on damage control.

The Mystery of the Vanished Camera

According to official police reports obtained by media outlets, the Civil Police of São Paulo confirmed that the action camera Maria used to record her fatal jump has not been located. When cornered by investigators shortly after the incident, the intercepted operators explicitly denied knowing where the device was.

Despite an extensive search conducted by law enforcement across the heavily forested and rugged terrain beneath the abandoned railway bridge, the GoPro has vanished without a trace.

True-crime forums on Reddit and X (formerly Twitter) have erupted over the revelation. The consensus among online sleuths is that the camera likely captured highly damning evidence. Because Maria was executing the “airplane-style” launch for the first time, her camera would have captured close-up, high-definition audio and video of the platform’s final safety check—or lack thereof.

Furthermore, recent revelations show that the uncertified group, operating under the name “Entre Cordas” (Between Ropes), actively managed WhatsApp groups where they trained participants on how to film and edit their jumps specifically to achieve maximum viral reach on TikTok and Instagram. Investigators suspect the operators knew exactly how damaging that footage would be if it fell into the hands of the state police.

Frantic Clothing Changes and Flight into the Jungle

The allegations of stripping the body align seamlessly with the bizarre, evasive behavior of the instructors in the hour following the fall.

Eyewitnesses alerted police that after descending into the ravine and allegedly taking the camera, the operators began frantically loading heavy technical gear into a vehicle. More damningly, they were spotted changing out of their official, branded “Entre Cordas” staff shirts into generic civilian clothing.

Goulart stated that he personally flagged down a responding police officer to point out the sudden wardrobe change, prompting authorities to order the crew to stay put. Ignoring the command, the trio attempted to flee into the dense, wild brush surrounding the bridge structure, triggering a high-stakes manhunt that required police helicopters to successfully execute their arrest.

A Toxic Cult of ‘Going Viral’

As the federal government now actively studies the complete demolition of the Ponte do Esqueleto to prevent future underground operations, the structural rot of the “Entre Cordas” group is fully exposed. Operating with zero corporate registration, no tax ID, and no legal permits, the group relied purely on its 80,000 social media followers and clips boasting millions of views to lure in tourists, charging roughly 290 Reals ($55 USD) a ticket.

“They built an entire business model around chasing digital algorithms, completely ignoring physical safety checks,” a local investigator remarked.

With the GoPro camera still missing and cyber-crime units currently auditing the suspects’ personal phones for cloud-synchronized backups, the legal noose is tightening. What was initially reported as a terrible, unthinkable mistake has transformed into a dark legal battle over evidence destruction, corporate greed, and the frantic attempts to bury the truth of Maria Eduarda’s final seconds.