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Spring break dangers: 5 Americans whose vacations ended in death

Spring break is an annual getaway to tropical areas for co-eds, but it can end in tragedy like it did for these five Americans who traveled and never came home.

It's an annual migration every March, when spring break co-eds flock to sunny beaches and beautiful resorts in tropical areas of the United States, Mexico and the Caribbean islands.

But some don't return home. 

Murders, kidnappings and fatal batches of drugs cut unexpected fun-seekers' lives short.

There's an especially hot spotlight on travel this year after Mexican cartels kidnapped four Americans and killed two of them in the state of Tamaulipas, just south of Texas. 

The U.S. State Department issued a Level 4 travel advisory for six Mexican states in October 2022, including Tamaulipas, and doubled down on Friday when the U.S. Embassy and Consulates in Mexico issued the reminder after reports of a shooting in Tamaulipas. 

US ISSUES ‘DO NOT TRAVEL’ WARNING FOR PARTS OF MEXICO AS SPRING BREAK APPROACHES

The five other Mexican states considered a Level 4 threat because of crime and kidnapping are Guerrero, Zacatecas, Sinaloa, Colima and Michoacan.

Here are five fatal spring break cases, along with a travel expert's safety tips. 

Natalee Holloway is one of the most well-known cases of spring break fun in the sun turned tragedy.

Holloway was an 18-year-old from Alabama who vanished on May 30, 2005, the same day she was supposed to fly home from Aruba. 

She and her friends were celebrating their high school graduation and checked in to a Holiday Inn, but she never checked out. 

NANCY GRACE, NATALEE HOLLOWAY'S MOTHER COME FACE-TO-FACE WITH ARUBAN AUTHORITES IN SEARCH OF JUSTICE

The teen was last seen around 1:30 a.m. on May 30, 2005, after a night of drinking.

She reportedly left a nightclub with Joran van der Sloot and brothers Deepak Kalpoe and Satish Kalpoe, but authorities were never able to nail down what happened next.

No one has been charged in connection with her disappearance and her body was never found.

Brittanee Drexel was a 17-year-old from Rochester, New York, who went missing during a 2009 spring break trip to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.

Drexel was walking between hotels when she was last seen. Her boyfriend, who was in Rochester, became concerned when she stopped answering text messages.

Her disappearance remained a mystery for more than a decade until investigators found her body in May 2022 several miles from where she was last seen.

NY TEEN BRITTANEE DREXEL SENT EERIE TEXTS TO BOYFRIEND BEFORE DISAPPEARANCE, DEATH

"Today marks the beginning of a new chapter. The search for Brittanee is now a pursuit of Brittanee's justice," Drexel's mother Dawn said after Moody's arrest. "This is truly a mother’s worst nightmare. I am mourning my beautiful daughter Brittanee as I have for the past 13 years."

Her killer, Raymond Douglas Moody, was arrested shortly after her body was found, and he pleaded guilty to kidnapping, raping and murdering Drexel.

He was sentenced to life in prison.

Mark Kilroy was a 21-year-old University of Texas student when he went on a spring break trip in March 1989 to the Mexican state of Tamaulipas, the same region where the four American tourists were recently kidnapped. 

Kilroy suffered a similar fate. He was abducted, tortured and murdered as part of a human sacrifice ritual by a Mexican cult. 

His body was found in April 1989 in a mass grave.

MEXICAN CARTEL ‘APOLOGISES’ IN LETTER FOR KIDNAPPING, MURDER OF AMERICANS, TURNS IN MEMBERS ‘RESPONSIBLE’

Kilroy's friend, Ryan Fenley, has said in interviews since then that Americans should be careful when traveling for spring break.

"We were planning this big spring break extravaganza. We were going to meet new people, go drinking across the border, flirt and have a good time," Fenley told a writer for Sam Houston State University in 2014, while he was teaching there. 

"College students today weren’t born at that time, so they don’t know about this case. But, they need to know the severity of it — how big it was."

MEXICAN SINALOA DRUG CARTEL OPERATIVE PLEADS GUILTY TO INTERNATIONAL DRUG TRAFFICKING CHARGES

Christine Englehardt was a 24-year-old from Pennsylvania who spent spring break in Miami Beach in March 2021 where she was allegedly drugged and raped by two North Carolina men before she died.

She was found dead and "semi-nude" in her hotel room, according to authorities. Investigators said she ingested a "green pill" that was later identified as fentanyl.

CHRISTINE ENGLEHARDT DEATH: MIAMI BEACH SPRING BREAKERS NOW FACE MURDER CHARGES

The two suspects – Evoire Collier, 21, and Dorian Taylor, 25 – were charged with first-degree murder, among other charges. 

The case is pending. 

MIAMI BEACH SPRING BREAK HORROR: WOMAN FOUND DEAD IN HOTEL ROOM REMEMBERED AS 'FUNNY AND BEAUTIFUL'

Susan Jacques was part of a group of Connecticut high school students who traveled to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, for spring break in April 1986.

The 18-year-old disappeared from her motel room one night. Three days later she was found dead about 35 miles away, floating in a canal west of Delray Beach, according to the South Florida Sun-Sentinel.

Jacques had reportedly told friends she was leaving the motel to take a walk on the beach before she vanished.

The Sun-Sentinel reported afterward that Jacques' body was found fully clothed and she was still wearing expensive jewelry, which added to the case's perplexity.

"It probably was a stranger, probably an abduction by guile or by force, into a car," Phil Mundy, a Fort Lauderdale detective on her case, told the newspaper at the time.

Kevin Coffey, a travel risk trainer and consultant who was a 35-year veteran of the Los Angeles Police Department where he investigated crimes against travelers and tourists, said it's imperative for travelers to check the Department of State for their destination's crime information and warnings.

He suggested signing up for the Department of State's STEP (Smart Traveler Enrollment Program) service, which warns travelers of significant civil uprisings and violence or natural catastrophes, and downloaded the app "GeoSure," which drills down to the granular level and provides "scores" about nighttime safety, women's safety, health and medical and LGBTQ safety.

"The majority of leisure travelers can spend 10 to 20 hours looking at their destinations where they want to go and stay and what they want to do, but nothing on safety, security and health mitigation," Coffey told Fox New Digital. "We are trying to get people to change that perspective to prepare for what-if scenarios."

Some "what-if scenarios" he mentioned are lost or stolen wallets or phones or if you get injured or sick.

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