No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeNewsHome Invasion Forces Canadian Visitors to Leave Costa Rica

Home Invasion Forces Canadian Visitors to Leave Costa Rica

A Canadian couple from Nanaimo shared details of an armed home invasion that cut their vacation in Costa Rica short. Louise Fleming and Drew Hammond stayed at a friend’s house in Tárcoles, north of Jacó, when four masked men entered the property on the evening of February 21.

Fleming stood on the balcony. A figure appeared from the shadows. “I just said oh my god, this is danger,” she said. The men held guns to Hammond’s head. When he tried to get up, one struck him in the face with a pistol and nearly knocked him unconscious. The intruders brought Fleming from another bedroom. They had already zip-tied her hands and legs and taped her mouth shut. They applied the same restraints to Hammond.

The robbers searched the house for close to an hour. They took cash, watches and sentimental jewelry. They loaded the items into the couple’s rental car and threw the phones into the pool. Hammond found scissors and cut Fleming free. He recovered the phones from the pool and called police. Officers said another similar home invasion had occurred nearby.

The couple left Costa Rica 10 days early. Marks from the zip ties stayed on their wrists for days afterward, and Fleming carried a bruise on her cheek. Hammond warned other travelers to choose their accommodations with care. “Five-star, gated, guarded properties are safe, but when you’re up where we were, there’s no security,” he said.

Fleming called for action from Costa Rican officials. “The message I want is for the Costa Rican government to do something about what’s happening there and I want the police to keep investigating and try to find these people who did this to us,” she stated. The pair said the experience changed them. They have no plans to return to Costa Rica.

The case adds to concerns about crime in popular travel spots. Canadian authorities advise people to exercise a high degree of caution in Costa Rica. The United States government and others have issued similar alerts. Tourism representatives in the country have asked officials to expand security measures.

Trending Now

Nosara Landowners Build Costa Rica’s First Voluntary Biological Corridor

Private landowners in Nosara have begun to register ecological easements that form the country’s first biological corridor created solely through voluntary conservation agreements. The...

Costa Rica Urges De-Escalation as Iran Retaliates to U.S.-Israel Attack

Costa Rica expressed deep concern over the escalating conflict in the Middle East after the United States and Israel carried out airstrikes on Iran...

Costa Rica Fashion Week Debuts in Arts Festival Lineup

Costa Rica Fashion Week marks its 25th edition by aligning with the International Arts Festival, blending runway shows with broader cultural offerings for the...

Venezuela Reports 475% Inflation as Reforms Begin

Venezuelan inflation soared to 475 percent in 2025, the highest in the world, driven by a tightening of US sanctions in the lead up...

Thousands Stranded at Sea as Strait of Hormuz Shutdown

In a deepening humanitarian crisis amid escalating Middle East tensions, approximately 20,000 seafarers and 15,000 cruise ship passengers find themselves stranded in the turbulent...

Interpol Arrests 60 Suspected Child Predators in Central America

Law enforcement agencies in nine countries arrested 60 suspects accused of child sexual offences and identified 65 child victims during a coordinated international operation....
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica