Kyle Kester's parents admit they weren't thrilled when he built his dream home tucked in a rocky, secluded valley 18 miles north of Guadalajara.
They worried for his safety in the isolated Mexican countryside where the nearest neighbor was a half-hour ride down a rutted dirt road, passable at times only by motorcycle, or whether the state-of-the-art 6,000-square-foot stucco house in a poverty-stricken land could make him a target for thieves, or worse.
The 38-year-old Apple Valley native reassured his parents that he was safe among the locals he befriended and employed to help him build the house by hand in a land where good-paying jobs were scarce. They were like family, he said, and he trusted them.
"He loved the people," his father, Harley Kester said. "He would still love them. I'm sure he would."
Kester was slain Feb. 10 in the home he had finished just a few months earlier. A friend found his body in a bedroom about two days after he was beaten and stabbed to death, allegedly by a pair of teenagers and a 21-year-old whom he had hired to help him install an irrigation system and who were frequent guests in his home. The suspects were identified through footage captured on surveillance cameras Kester had installed, and the teenagers were arrested. The third suspect is believed to have fled to the United States. The getaway driver was arrested and released.
The grief has stretched from the rural Mexican villages where Kester was beloved to Apple Valley, where his parents are left in the dark about the details of the investigation. All they know is that their eldest son was brutally killed for a pickup truckload of electronics.
"Kyle just would have said 'Take it,' " said his mother, Wini Kester, nodding toward the urn on the mantel filled with her son's ashes. "He would have given them anything they wanted, or he would have given them the opportunity to earn money and buy the things that they wanted."
Guadalajara police have told the Kesters little about the investigation. Their main source of information has been Kester's closest friend, Hugo Barron Felix, who visits the juvenile jail daily where the teenagers are held, hoping to get word on a trial date.