The Strange Case of the Bali Bodies.

Diwundrin

Well-known Member
The plot is thickening in this very sad and mysterious case. A mother and daughter died of apparent poisoning 24hrs after arriving in Bali for a holiday.

Full details below.
The past fortnight was bliss for Noelene Bischoff and her daughter, Yvana Jeana Yuri Bischoff. The pair had celebrated Yvana's 14th birthday as well as Christmas and New Year's Eve.
Their next big event was a Bali holiday. But less than 24 hours after arriving on the island, the mother and daughter from Wurtulla on the Sunshine Coast were dead.
The Bischoff family on Sunday said the deaths of the inseparable pair were ''freakish'' and inexplicable and the family was confused by suggestions the two had suffered an allergic reaction to food.
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Inseparable: Yvana and her mother, Noelene Bischoff. Photo: Supplied

Keryn Bischoff, Noelene's sister-in-law, said neither had declared food allergies or carried an EpiPen, and Noelene loved eating seafood.
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A ''blurry'' timeline of events added to their suspicion.
''I hope there's no foul play involved,'' Ms Bischoff said.
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Yvana in her school uniform. Photo: Supplied

The pair checked into Padang Bai Beach Resort before 3pm on Friday and visited the nearby district of Ubud before returning to the resort for dinner.
Just after midnight, Yvana alerted security to their violent illness. They were taken by private ambulance to hospital, but Noelene died en route at 1.45am, local sources said.
Yvana was then rushed to BIMC Hospital, an international clinic in Denpasar. Despite still being conscious and able to speak to doctors on arrival, she could not be saved.
Police said: ''Checking the scene, we found lots of medicine. All the medicines are from abroad. The vomit and medicines have been taken to forensic laboratory.''
Noelene's brother Malcolm Bischoff believed Yvana told hospital staff she had eaten mahi-mahi for dinner at the resort. The hospital investigators suspected the fish carried toxins.
On Sunday afternoon, a resort manager told the family he had eaten the same meal as Noelene and Yvana and he had not felt ill.
The chief of criminal investigations in Karangasem, Adnan Pangibu, is handling the case. Police recovered a receipt from Noelene's purse that appeared to be from a restaurant in Sukawati. Mr Pangibu said the restaurant was not suspected of any wrongdoing. No other customers who had visited the restaurant that day reported being sick.
Police did not disclose the restaurant's name nor the list of dishes on the receipt.
Keryn Bischoff said the pair had travelled to Fiji, Thailand, Vanuatu and New Zealand for holidays.
''Every other year they came home,'' Ms Bischoff said. Noelene, a managing nurse at Caloundra Hospital, had travelled to Bali before and spent her 20s backpacking in Europe.
''This happened to my sister-in-law Noelene, who is a triple-certificate nursing sister with a master's degree and a bachelor of clinical medicine,'' Ms Bischoff said.
Yvana had just finished year 8 at Caloundra Christian College, deputy principal Andrew Priaulx said. The school community was planning to hold a memorial service on Thursday.
The bodies are awaiting autopsies. Noelene's sister, Desley, will fly to Bali to bring them home.
A Department of Foreign Affairs and Trading spokesman said the Australian consul-general in Bali was liaising with authorities.


4 days on and still no autopsy has been done. The family have asked that they be returned to Australia for autopsy as Indonesia are indicating a delay of another week. Then the Indonesian coroner stated that he was 'about to perform the autopsy after police had given the go ahead but now the family have delayed it.' The story, suspected causes, and minds, change daily over there. (That's how Indo rolls.)

Now however the local police, after shrugging the deaths off as accidental food poisoning are declaring it a possible crime scene and want the autopsies done in their jurisdiction.

I can see their point, if not their diligence so far. Seems to me the best thing to do would be send a couple of forensic pathologists from here to observe the autopsy and everyone would be satisfied.

It's taking on political aromas now with the implication of a Qld friend of the family in high places influencing the Attorney General to try and take authority from the Indonesians who hate that kind of thing and it's getting complicated.

I have to feel for the family in this but feelings must give way to investigating this as there looks to be more than meets the eye. Now a cache of 'medicines' is reported as being found in their room. Hard to see what a 14 year girl would be taking and the mother was a registered nurse and presumably not drug addicted. But then Indo has a drug busting obsession with Aussies in general and seem to insert that 'suspected drug possession' into a lot of strange things they do in the name of justice. The drugs in the victims' room though were prescription drugs 'up to 30 types' which is even stranger, the mother being a nurse.

All getting mysteriouser by the day.

Why, oh why, do Australians go to Bali?


 

My thoughts exactly Di, why do they go there as the place is so dirty and corrupt, kids getting ill on alcohol they make and put in drinks and the water is disgusting too.
It worries me if the locals do the autopsy as they too would be corrupt and would do anything to cover up a crime in Bali.
The speculation about the drugs is a storm in a teacup as she was a nurse and came prepared is all, let's hope they can bring them home to Australia for the autopsy where the truth of their deaths will be revealed.I feel for the family and what they must be going through
 
... The speculation about the drugs is a storm in a teacup as she was a nurse and came prepared is all ...

How is a nurse who carries a bag-full of 'scrips "prepared"? It isn't as if she were carrying aspirin, Tums and cough medicine - you have to have a medical condition to be carrying that sort of firepower, nurse or not.

There are so many possibilities in a scenario like this, the only way to ascertain what really happened is the autopsy. Personally I agree with you folks - I'd never visit a place like Bali.
 

Does Bali have cheap prescription drugs ? like a lot of folks from the USA go to Canada or Mexico to get their drugs at a fraction of the cost. Maybe the mom was there scoring cheap 'scripts for people and got in with a bad crowd.
 
Yes I wouldn't word it as 'prepared' either. But what the Indo cops say and what is reality doesn't always coincide. Nor do we take the word of all Aussies that the pot and potions they're carrying 'were a frame up.' Things get confused there.

It's just that a nurse carrying that many different meds doesn't ring true, anyone needing that amount of medication isn't going to be kicking their heels in Bali. So either she was up to something or the 'drugs' are a figment of imagination. No bets yet but I know where my money will go.

Indo doesn't like Aussies, but they don't want to lose our tourist dollars either so they're a tad confused how to play this. They shrugged it off to food poisoning but didn't find anyone else who ate where they did who got sick. So do they keep that one going and scare more tourists off? Or make out it was some targetted 'drug ring' murder so the average Joe tourist will feel safer going there?? They (and drug runners for that matter) are a devious lot. As said, gets complicated.

No idea about meds prices there OH, but you could be on to something.
They just didn't seem to be there long enough to get much done, and to take a 14yo girl into that game just doesn't seem to gel. Until toxicology tests are done we don't even know what the poison was. Probably nothing to do with the drugs though unless a bottle of something a 14yo might take was spiked.
 

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