The Death of Shanquella Robinson
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About this listen
How did a birthday trip to Cabo San Lucas end with Shanquella Robinson dead in less than 24 hours? Why did her travel companions initially claim “alcohol poisoning” — and how did a viral assault video, conflicting autopsy findings, and a stalled U.S.–Mexico extradition fight turn the Shanquella Robinson case into one of the most haunting true crime mysteries of 2022?
In this episode, hosts Adrienne Barker and Joseph Lobosco revisit the death of 25‑year‑old Shanquella Robinson in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, breaking down the “Cabo Six” timeline, the shocking cell phone assault video, Mexico’s femicide arrest warrant, the FBI Charlotte investigation, and why U.S. federal prosecutors declined to file charges. This true crime podcast discussion explores the cross‑border legal roadblocks, the critical autopsy discrepancies between Mexico and North Carolina, and how the Robinson family’s wrongful death lawsuit may be the last path to uncovering what really happened inside that Cabo villa.
Tune in to hear:
October 28–29, 2022 – Cabo San Lucas birthday trip turns deadly: Shanquella Robinson travels from Charlotte, North Carolina to Cabo San Lucas, Mexico with six friends, is assaulted in a luxury villa the morning of October 29, and is later found unresponsive; after a delayed call for help, a doctor arrives, her condition deteriorates, and she is pronounced dead that evening.
October 29, 2022 – The hours that raise the hardest questions: Investigators’ timeline places the altercation around 7:00–7:30 AM, a housekeeper finds Shanquella unresponsive around midday, and the group reportedly calls for medical help around 2:15 PM — setting up a major debate about delayed aid, negligence, and preventable loss of life.
October 30, 2022 – The “alcohol poisoning” story and the family’s suspicions: Shanquella’s travel companions return to the U.S., bring her luggage to her family, and tell her mother, Celand Robinson, that she died from alcohol poisoning — a claim that quickly clashes with what investigators and reports later indicate.
Mid‑November 2022 – The viral assault video that changed everything: A disturbing cell phone video leaks and spreads online, appearing to show Shanquella being beaten while others watch, contradicting early claims about her death and igniting international outrage and demands for justice.
October–November 2022 – Mexican autopsy findings and a “violent” manner of death: Mexican medical examiners conduct a partial autopsy and record findings that point to a violent death, including severe spinal cord injury and “atlas luxation” — escalating the case into a homicide investigation.
November 2022 – Mexico issues a femicide arrest warrant and seeks extradition: Mexican authorities identify a primary female aggressor and obtain an arrest warrant on femicide charges, while an extradition request and international alerts collide with the reality that the “Cabo Six” are already back in the United States.
November 2022 – The FBI Charlotte investigation and tips about possible evidence: The FBI opens a parallel investigation, fields tips describing injuries and possible surveillance cameras, and coordinates with Mexican authorities as the case becomes a cross‑border legal standoff.
November 17, 2022 – The U.S. autopsy conflict that reshapes the case: The Mecklenburg County Medical Examiner’s office performs an autopsy in North Carolina, reporting no spinal cord injury or broken neck and ultimately listing the cause of death as “undetermined” — creating a pivotal forensic contradiction that complicates prosecution and extradition.
March–April 2023 – Calls for federal action and DOJ declines to prosecute: Family attorneys (including Ben Crump and Sue Ann Robinson) urge U.S. intervention, but on April 12, 2023, the Department of Justice and FBI inform the family...