On Friday as Yam was leading a reporter from The Atlanta Journal-Constitution to where he found the bodies, a column of Belize police and FBI trucks drove by. Now staying in Corozal, the FBI agents declined to talk about their investigation.
A bright yellow strip of police caution tape still hung from one of the cane stalks on Yams property Friday, and a door lay flat on the ground nearby. Yam speculated investigators used it to carry away the remains, which were found in advanced states of decomposition.
Wielding a machete, Yam stepped amid the towering sugar cane stalks. Brittle leaves crunched underfoot. Voracious mosquitoes swarmed. It was hot and sticky in his field. A sharp cane leaf sliced Yams right wrist, drawing bright red blood. He reached the clearing and pointed to a dark stain on the ground where he saw the bodies.
The path was not here. When they brought the bodies, they left this trail, he said, speaking in Spanish through an interpreter. I dont really know exactly what happened.