Just how scarce those resources are became evident soon after the bodies of Matus and DeVoursney were discovered by a farmer on May 1, 2017 six days after the pair had disappeared.
Joe Milholen, an American who was friends with the pair, remembered being called by police to identify the bodies.
When he showed up at the field late in the afternoon, a detective told him to wait until a pathologist arrived.
We had to wait all night for the pathologist, he said in an interview from Corozal, in northern Belize. This guy was telling me how busy they had been ... there was a rash of murders and suspicious deaths.
The pathologist arrived around 5:45 a.m., said Milholen, but he had no supplies no body bags or something to cart the bodies out of the bush.
So I got to figure out where the hell do you get a body bag, he said.
Milholen went to the local hospital, but they didnt have any. He managed to secure two body bags from someone with ties to the U.S. embassy in Belize who knew Matus.
When he returned to the field, Matus lay on an old wooden door while DeVoursney was being carried out of the bush on a large piece of plywood.
I cant lie, it was one of the most difficult things Ive gone through, Milholen said, his voice trailing off. I was frazzled Im still frazzled, man.
Milholen, a former deputy sheriff from Georgia, was one of the la