On May 14, 2012, Julián Gómez took his 12-year-old daughter, Laura, on a short sailing trip—a routine overnight excursion on their boat, El Albatros. His wife, María, watched them leave with a strange uneasiness she couldn’t explain. When they didn’t return the next day, a Coast Guard search began. By evening, an alert was issued. The next morning, El Albatros was found drifting 17 miles offshore: the sail torn, the radio dead, impact marks on the deck—but no sign of Julián or Laura.
The case was labeled an accident, yet clues never fit. Food was missing, logbook pages torn, and no safety equipment used. Twelve years later, a retired Coast Guard captain revealed suppressed satellite images showing a speedboat approaching El Albatros and a struggle on deck. The vessel belonged to Navíos Aranda S.A., a company tied to illegal dumping—one Julián had secretly been investigating.
Julián’s hidden notebook and files revealed threats he’d received. A surviving employee later confessed that armed men boarded the sailboat seeking evidence. Julián shielded his daughter, and both were taken to an abandoned offshore platform, where no one survived.
María never recovered their remains, but she finally learned the truth: they didn’t disappear—they were silenced for what they tried to expose.