Police recover body of 19-year-old woman found dead in a beach attack
By AP, January 20, 2026Authorities were trying to determine on Tuesday whether a Canadian woman found dead on an Australian beach had been killed by dingoes.
The 19-year-old woman was found on a beach at K’gari, formerly known as Fraser Island, on Monday. Police said her body had been “interfered with” by native Australian dogs.
But police would not speculate on the cause of death, saying her body had been discovered 90 minutes after she went for a morning swim on the world’s largest sand island off the Queensland state coast.
Police were called to the beach near a shipwreck, a popular tourist attraction, at 6.35 a.m.
Two men were driving an SUV along the beach when they saw around 10 dingoes near the body, Police Insp. Paul Algie said.
“It was obviously a very traumatic and horrific scene for them to uncover,” Algie told reporters.
“I can confirm there was markings on her body consistent with having been touched and interfered with by the dingoes,” he added.
A post-mortem examination of the remains to determine the cause of death was expected to be completed on Wednesday.
“We simply can’t confirm whether this young lady drowned or died as a result of being attacked by dingoes,” Algie said.
Dad saved toddler from dingo attack in Australia
In the same area back in 2019, in a similar incident, rescue personnel said a father fought off several dingoes to save his 14-month-old son from one of the wild dogs that was dragging the boy from their campervan on an Australian island early Friday.
The boy had deep cuts on his head from the attack on Fraser Island in Queensland state, paramedic Ben Du Toit said.
The family was sleeping when a dingo entered their campervan. Du Toit said the parents awoke to their son’s cries, the sound fading as he was dragged away.
The father ran outside and fought off several dingoes to rescue his son.
“He was apparently grabbed around the back of the neck area and dragged away. So, if it wasn’t for the parents and their quick thinking and fighting off the dingoes, he probably would have had more severe injuries,” Frank Bertoli, a pilot for RACQ Life Flight, told Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
The boy was airlifted to a hospital.
Bertoli said the boy is the third child attacked by dingoes on Fraser Island this year.
The island is part of an Australian national park and is known for its rainforests, wetlands and extensive coastal dunes.
Fraser Island also displays strong warnings for visitors to avoid dingoes and to not try to draw their attention or leave food behind.
Principal Ranger Daniel Clifton told reporters that close interactions with people and access to food can alter dingoes’ behavior and raise aggression.
Extra rangers were assigned to investigate the attack and patrol the island. Clifton said dingo specialists were trying to identify which animals attacked and to brief campers about what happened.