A fatal rope jumping accident in southeastern Brazil has left a young woman dead and three men in police custody, after extreme sports enthusiasts failed to secure a safety line before launching the victim off a 40-meter high bridge, local law enforcement confirmed Sunday.
The tragedy unfolded Saturday on the Skeleton Bridge, located in the inland region of Sao Paulo state. Graphic video footage of the incident, which has since spread widely across social media platforms, captures the disturbing sequence of events: two men hoist 21-year-old Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas above their shoulders and push her off the bridge span, while nearby spectators spot the missing safety gear and scream out a frantic warning: “Guys, the cord!”
In an official statement provided to AFP, police confirmed that critical safety equipment was never properly attached to de Freitas before the jump, and the victim did not survive the nearly 131-foot fall. Authorities have taken three men into custody on charges of “homicide with dolus eventualis,” a legal classification indicating the suspects were fully aware their actions carried a high risk of death but chose to proceed with the activity regardless.
Investigations remain ongoing, with police working to document all contributing circumstances of the accident and assign full legal liability. Local Brazilian media has confirmed the victim’s identity, and reports indicate de Freitas shared a lighthearted pre-accident post to her Instagram account shortly before the jump, captioning a photo of the bridge site: “Who was the crazy person who let me come jump off a bridge???”
Prior footage of rope jumping activities organized on the Skeleton Bridge by local adventure group Entre Cordas shows all participants wearing thick, secured safety cords around their waists before being launched, highlighting the fatal deviation from standard safety protocols in this incident.
Rope jumping, the extreme sport involved in the accident, is distinct from the more widely known bungee jumping: it uses a far less elastic cord, designed to let participants swing back and forth below the jump point rather than bouncing upward after the initial fall. The sport was pioneered by American adventurer Dan Osman, who himself died in a 1998 rope jumping accident at the age of 35.
