
COURTESY FACEBOOK/TODD JAMES
A Canadian backpacker died from drowning after she was attacked by dingoes on a popular Australian beach, a coroner has found.
The body of Piper James, 19, was found in the early morning on 19 January surrounded by about ten dingoes on K'Gari (formerly known as Fraser Island), off the eastern coast of Queensland.
"Piper died as a result of drowning in the setting of multiple injuries, due to, or as a consequence of a dingo attack," the state's coroners court said on Friday, with investigations into her death ongoing.
At least six of the about ten dingoes that were found circling James's body were later euthanised. About 200 dingoes live on K'Gari and are protected as a native species by law.
Earlier investigations had found "extensive post-mortem dingo bite marks" and that it was "not likely" that pre-mortem dingo bites had caused "immediate death".
The teen had been working at a backpacker's hostel in the weeks before her death and had told friends she was going for an early morning swim.
In the days after her death, James's parents told local media that their daughter had already dreamed of travelling and saved up for her trip after graduating from high school.
Angela and Todd James described Piper as a "kind spirit" with an "infectious laugh".
Her mother told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) that Piper loved to "start her day in the ocean watching the sun come up, because she just felt so free there".
The last known fatal dingo attack on the island was in 2001 when a nine-year-old boy was killed by a dingo after tripping and falling near a campsite, according to the ABC.
In 2023, a woman jogging along a beach on K'Gari was attacked by dingoes, forcing her to run into the ocean. Two witnesses saw her, pulled her out of the water and put her in the back of their vehicle before driving her to safety, according to local reports at the time.