
Bridge Sealed and Instructors Moved as Brazil Rope-Jump Death Inquiry Deepens
Authorities block access to the Skeleton Bridge and transfer three detained instructors amid revelations of systemic safety failures and a macabre social media video.
Within four days of the death of a 21-year-old woman thrown from a disused railway bridge without a safety rope, the municipality of Limeira, acting at the request of the federal government, began sealing irregular access points to the Ponte do Esqueleto. Simultaneously, the three instructors arrested at the scene were transferred overnight from Piracicaba to a detention centre in Guarulhos after their lawyer cited threats to their physical safety inside the first facility. The twin moves mark an urgent attempt by Brazilian authorities to contain the fallout from a tragedy that has drawn international condemnation and exposed a near-total absence of regulatory oversight for extreme sports at the abandoned structure.
Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas, a physical education student, was flung from the 40-metre-high bridge on 13 June in what witnesses described as a horrifying lapse. Viral footage captures onlookers screaming “the rope, the rope!” moments before she plummeted. The three men—Luis Felipe Feliciano Egoroff, Maicon Fernandes Cintra and Vitor de Freitas Gonçalves—admitted in police interviews that they simply did not notice the safety cord was still lying on the ground. Investigators found no designated person was responsible for final equipment checks, no double-verification protocol was followed, and the victim was launched using a technique known as the “little aeroplane” without any lifeline attached. The Brazilian Rope Jump Association branded the sequence of errors “grotesque”, while police noted the suspicious disappearance of a GoPro camera that may have recorded the preparations.
The tragedy has been further inflamed by the resurfacing of a four-year-old video posted by Egoroff on social media. In it, he and other instructors are seen jokingly hurling a black bag off the same bridge with the caption “Getting rid of a body”. The clip, now widely shared, has deepened public fury and raised questions about the culture inside the informal group. A witness who jumped earlier that day told investigators the rotation of participants was rushed, with insufficient checks between jumps. International coverage—from Spanish, Italian and Australian outlets—has framed the incident as a cautionary tale of adventure tourism operating in a regulatory vacuum, with European observers noting that Brazil lacks a national licensing body for rope-jumping activities.
The Ponte do Esqueleto, an unfinished relic of a failed 1990s railway expansion, has long been a magnet for unauthorised cycling and free-fall jumps, despite a previous serious rope-jump accident and a cyclist’s death in 2024. The federal government, which inherited the structure, is now studying demolition, while local authorities have dug trenches and erected barriers to block access. Viewed from São Paulo, the case has reignited a long-simmering debate over mandatory safety standards for extreme sports. Analysts in London note that without a statutory inspection regime, operators effectively self-certify, leaving participants exposed to catastrophic human error. As the police investigation continues, the death of Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas may finally force a reckoning with the legal void that allowed a young woman to be thrown into the abyss without a single cord securing her life.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 2 languages
The death of 21-year-old Maria Eduarda, thrown from a bridge without a rope during a rope jump, has exposed the lack of regulation for this extreme sport in Brazil. The instructors cannot explain the failure, while local authorities block access to the bridge and the federal government considers demolition. The community demands urgent safety rules to prevent further tragedies.
No safety protocol, a completely unregulated activity, and suspicion of evidence tampering: the rope jump tragedy in Brazil takes on increasingly disturbing contours. The instructors admitted a 'blackout' and threw the girl using the 'little airplane' technique without a double check, while the victim had sent a premonitory message: 'Who was the crazy person who let me jump?'. The team's flight and the disappearance of a GoPro worsen the suspects' position.
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