By International Investigation Desk

The claim is as explosive as it is disturbing: leaked autopsy results from the five Italian divers who died in the Maldives allegedly show they did not die from asphyxiation, but from injuries pointing to something far more sinister.

Authorities have not confirmed that allegation.

No official forensic report has publicly concluded that the five victims were attacked or that their deaths were caused by a crime. Available reporting points in a different direction: preliminary findings for two of the victims indicated drowning or anoxia caused by lack of oxygen, while Italian forensic examinations have reportedly continued to examine asphyxiation and drowning as leading theories.

Still, the viral claim has spread quickly because the Maldives tragedy already contains several troubling questions.

Five Italian divers disappeared during a deep cave dive in Vaavu Atoll in mid-May 2026. The victims included ecology professor Monica Montefalcone, her daughter Giorgia Sommacal, marine biologist Federico Gualtieri, researcher Muriel Oddenino, and diving instructor Gianluca Benedetti. The dive took place far beyond the Maldives’ usual recreational diving limit, and recovery efforts were so dangerous that a Maldivian military diver also died from decompression sickness.

The bodies were eventually recovered from the underwater cave system after specialist divers were brought in. But the return of the bodies did not end the investigation. It only moved the focus from the seabed to the autopsy room.

If injuries inconsistent with a normal diving death were found, investigators would need to determine whether they were caused before death, during panic inside the cave, by impact against rock, by recovery operations, by marine life, or by criminal violence. That distinction matters. Not every wound found on a body recovered from a cave proves an attack.

At the same time, families and investigators are likely to demand answers beyond a simple label of β€œdrowning.”

Why did the group enter such a dangerous cave environment?

Were they properly equipped for the depth?

Were the dive plans and permits accurate?

Did they become lost in the cave?

Did equipment, gas planning, visibility, or human error play a role?

Reuters reported that Maldivian authorities were investigating whether the divers descended deeper than expected and whether other safety factors contributed to the fatal incident. Experts have also warned that cave diving at such depths requires specialized planning, redundant equipment, and training far beyond ordinary recreational diving.

That is why the phrase β€œnot asphyxiation” is so powerful β€” and so dangerous if unsupported.

If true, it would change the entire case.

If false, it risks turning a fatal diving disaster into an unfounded murder narrative before forensic teams finish their work.

For now, the responsible conclusion is clear: there is no confirmed public evidence that leaked autopsy results prove the five divers were killed in a crime. The confirmed investigation remains focused on a fatal deep cave dive, possible excessive depth, oxygen deprivation, drowning, equipment suitability, and human error.

But the unanswered questions remain haunting.

Five people entered the cave.
None came back alive.
A sixth man died trying to recover them.

And until the final forensic reports, dive-computer data, equipment analysis, and witness statements are released, the Maldives tragedy will remain suspended between two possibilities: a catastrophic diving failure β€” or something investigators have not yet made public.