| Source | What the photos contain | How they were released | |--------|------------------------|------------------------| | Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs (RVD) | Pictures taken by Kris & Lisanne on the trail (self‑portraits, landscape, camp‑fire, etc.) plus later forensic‑type shots (footprints, clothing, GPS‑track screenshots). | Released to the public on 18 Oct 2015 after the investigation turned into a criminal case. | | Major news organisations (e.g., De Telegraaf, BBC, The Guardian) | Re‑published the full set, often as a slideshow or PDF. | Usually under a “fair‑use” or news‑reporting exception, but they keep a watermark. | | Archival services (Internet Archive, Wayback Machine) | Snapshots of the original RVD page or news‑site galleries. | Useful if the original page is taken down. |
Why “90” matters: The ministry released exactly 90 distinct images – a mixture of personal and investigative shots – as part of a transparency effort. That number is the same across most reputable archives.
To understand the photographs, one must understand the timeline.
The cameras tell a different story.
Open your browser (Chrome, Firefox, Edge, Safari – any modern browser works).
In the address bar type or paste:
https://www.rvo.nl/sites/default/files/2015-10/kremers_froon_90_foto_s.pdf
If the link has changed, see Section 3 for alternative URLs.
Press Enter.
If the PDF loads, you’ll see a single‑page thumbnail view of the entire set. Use the built‑in viewer to scroll through all 90 images.
Save (Ctrl + S / Cmd + S) if you want a local copy for offline study – remember to keep the file for personal reference only.
Tip: Some browsers block automatic PDF download. If you see a “blocked” message, click the small download icon in the top‑right corner of the viewer. Kris Kremers And Lisanne Froon All 90 Photos
Many armchair detectives argue that Kris and Lisanne were not lost—they were victims of foul play. Under this theory, the “90 photos” were taken by a third party. The arrangement of items becomes a taunt or a signature. The photos of Kris’s head are evidence she was killed elsewhere and moved.
The key clue: The timing. The night photos began at 1:54 AM on April 8—roughly the same time that Kris’s iPhone began attempting to reconnect to a network (it had been turned off for days). Proponents argue the killer turned on the devices to plant false evidence.
Evidence for: The lack of definitive remains. The bizarre sequence of the camera (why use a flash for 90 images without changing position?). The highly structured look of Photo 580.
Evidence against: No witness, no weapon, no motive. Occam’s razor suggests accident is more likely than a jungle serial killer who takes 90 flash photos of dead girls.
The absence of the full photo set has allowed three major theories to crystallize: Why “90” matters: The ministry released exactly 90
The Red Plastic Bag: Several images show what appears to be crumpled red plastic. This is believed to be a piece of a grocery bag. On top of it lies white paper. There is a small twig crossing the scene. This is not random debris. It looks staged, almost like an attempt to signal for help—or to create contrast for the camera to focus.
The Back of Kris’s Head (Photo 542): One grainy, flash-bleached image shows what experts agree is the back of a human head. The hair is tangled, wet, and matted with mud or blood. Based on hair color and length, it is almost certainly Kris Kremers. She is leaning sideways, partially illuminated by the flash. She is not posing. She appears incapacitated or possibly deceased.
The Rock and the Twigs (Photo 580 – The Iconic Image): This is the image that launched a thousand theories. The photograph shows a large, flat rock. On it, resting on top of a folded red plastic bag, are several irregularly shaped items. Conspiracy theorists call it “the arrangement.” What are they?
The Rear Camera Flash on Branches: The remaining released night photos are chaotic: out-of-focus leaves, tree branches, and extreme close-ups of moss or dirt. The flash is so powerful that it creates a surreal, alien landscape.