American man found dead on beach during a Bahamas family vacation: Report

According to his family, an American man briefly disappeared in the Bahamas with his parents and was found dead on the beach the next morning.
They believe that the death of Dinari McAlmont, 23, of Maryland, died April 6 on Paradise Island in Nassau, was suspicious.
McAlmont’s mother, Michelle McAlmont, told Bahamas Witness News that she was “traumatized” after identifying her son’s body, claiming he appeared to have been beaten.
Travel warnings on crime issues, sharks warn of popular holiday destinations
The McAlmont family of Maryland was fouled in the Bahamas death of 23-year-old Dinari McAlmont. (iStock)
Royal Bahamas Police Force Commissioner Shanta Knowles told Eyewitness News that authorities are awaiting McAlmont’s autopsy results.
The police commissioner did not immediately respond to Fox News’s investigation.
U.S. warns travelers about the dangers of “terrorism and kidnapping” in Caribbean island

The McAlmont family lives in Atlantis, on the Bahamas Paradise Island. (iStock)
The McAlmont family lives in Atlantis, on the Bahamas Paradise Island.
Dinari apparently left his parents at dinner to buy his coat, which was when he disappeared, and his parents filed a report of missing persons when they could not use phone location data to track him.
Spring Break Warning: The Most Impossible Travel Hotspots Are Fatal Risks

Dinari McAlmont allegedly left his parents for a jacket at dinner, when he disappeared, and his parents filed a report of missing persons when they could not use phone location data to track him. (iStock)
Click here to get the Fox News app
“We are very sad about the death of a guest,” the resort told Fox News Digital in a statement. “Our ideas are with his family during this difficult time. We are fully working with the authorities when we investigate.”
The State Department has issued Level 2 travel consultations for the Bahamas as well as for Cuba, the Dominican Republic, the Dutch Antheles and the Turks and Caicos.
Level 2 travel consultation warns tourists that “there is a higher risk of paying attention to safety and security.”