MELBOURNE, Australia — Police said Tuesday human remains were found inside a large crocodile suspected of killing a tourist in Australia's second fatal attack in about a month.
The latest victim was 40-year-old doctor Dave Hogbin who fell from a steep bank Saturday into the Annan River south of Cooktown in Queensland state, his family said in a statement. The general practice doctor from Newcastle in New South Wales had been traveling on a camping vacation through Queensland with his wife Jane Hogbin and their three sons aged 2, 5 and 7 years. Cooktown is more than 2,500 kilometers (1,500 miles) from Newcastle by road.
Wildlife rangers on Monday euthanized a 4.9-meter (16-foot) crocodile in a creek 4 kilometers (2.5 miles) from where Dave Hogbin disappeared. The crocodile had scars on its snout like those witnesses described seeing on a reptile in the vicinity of the disappearance, officials said.
The human remains found inside the crocodile during an examination in Cooktown were believed to be Hogbin, a police statement said. Further testing would be conducted to positively identify the remains.
The family statement corrected police reports that Dave Hogbin had been fishing at the time he fell. He had been walking along a riverbank path five meters (16 feet) above the river when part of the bank gave way, according to his family.
''It caused Dave to fall down into the river below, and despite being tall, strong and fit, the conditions of the terrain meant Dave was unable to get himself out of the water,'' the statement said. His wife heard the splash when he fell and went to his aid, but ''due to the steepness and slipperiness of the bank, she was able to grab his arm, but soon began slipping into the river herself.''
''Dave's final, decisive act was to let go of Jane's arm when he realised she was falling in, despite knowing she was his only lifeline. Within moments, he was taken,'' the statement added.
Jane Hogbin said her husband's decision to release her saved her life.