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Video shows crocodile that killed Puerto Vallarta man in front of California couple — as new details emerge

NY Post Published Jun 28, 2026 Reviewed Jul 2, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
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A 28-year-old Mexican man was killed by a crocodile in Puerto Vallarta.
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The fatal incident occurred around 6:30 p.m. Friday at Marina Vallarta Beach.
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The victim’s body was recovered about 12 hours later early Saturday.
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Jamie Yetter, her fiancé Chris Bury, and her teenage daughter were staying at the Marriott Puerto Vallarta Resort & Spa.
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Signs near the beach warned of jellyfish, stingrays, and crocodiles in the water.
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By Saturday morning, beachgoers had returned to the same stretch of shoreline and were swimming in the water.
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Horrific new video shows the massive crocodile that killed a 28-year-old man in Puerto Vallarta in front of a California couple.

Grainy nighttime footage captured the huge reptile with its jaws open near Marriott Puerto Vallarta Resort & Spa after the deadly attack.

The fatal incident happened around 6:30 p.m. Friday at Marina Vallarta Beach, with Jalisco state police identifying the victim only as a 28-year-old man from Mexico who had been in the resort town for work.

His body was recovered about 12 hours later early Saturday.

Jamie Yetter, her fiancé, Chris Bury, and her teenage daughter were staying at the hotel and relaxing by the pool when they heard screams coming from the beach.

“We thought we saw a guy stuck in a rip current, so Chris took off down to the water, and I ran right after him,” Yetter said.

Bury jumped into a kayak without paddles in a desperate attempt to reach the man.

“There were no oars. There was really nothing at the beach at all to help. We were just scrambling, trying to do what we could,” Bury said.

“I was on the kayak right when he got pulled under.”

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Despite the Orange County family’s efforts, they were unable to save the victim.

“They didn’t tell anyone it was dangerous,” Yetter told Surfer.com.

She explained that signs near the beach warned of jellyfish, stingrays and crocodiles in the water, but her family initially mistook the crocodile symbol for an iguana.

“They didn’t tell us we shouldn’t go swimming. Even the next morning, I went down to the ocean. I assumed the beach would be closed. The beach wasn’t closed. There were no no-swimming signs,” Yetter added.

By Saturday morning, beachgoers had returned to the same stretch of shoreline, with families once again swimming in the water.

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