By CHARLOTTE KARP, SENIOR NEWS REPORTER and CAITLIN POWELL – NEWS REPORTER
Published: | Updated:
A young Swiss couple involved in a fatal shark attack at a tourist hotspot tried to get jobs nearby just a day earlier because they loved the area and wanted to live there.
Livia Mühlheim, 25, and her boyfriend Lukas Schindler, 26, were mauled by a bull shark during a 6.30am swim in the unpatrolled waters off Kylies Beach at Crowdy Bay, south of Port Macquarie, on Thursday.
Mr Schindler, an exchange student who had recently qualified as a diving instructor, tried desperately to fight off the three-metre shark as it attacked his girlfriend.
She had been filming a pod of dolphins with a GoPro when the shark bit her several times and tore off her left arm.
Mr Schindler was bitten twice on the leg before he managed to scare it away.
He then carried Ms Mühlheim 50 metres to shore where bystanders immediately jumped in to try to save their lives.
Despite these efforts, she died on the beach before paramedics arrived.
The Daily Mail has now been told the couple had tried to get employment at Discovery Caravan Park in nearby Harrington so they could live the area they had fallen in love with.


The beaches were closed following the attack, but they reopened on Friday afternoon after drone and jet ski surveillance showed no further threatening marine activity.
‘Ahead of the weekend, and noting the forecast hot temperatures that will attract large crowds to the beaches, drones will continue to provide shark surveillance to the area, particularly at Camden Haven and Crowdy Head, with nippers set to go ahead as scheduled on Sunday,’ a Surf Life Saving NSW spokesperson said.
Following the attack, Mr Schindler raced to find the closest phone in an attempt to save his girlfriend after laying her down on the sand.
A bystander saw him and immediately dialled triple-0 whose operator quickly talked her through creating a makeshift tourniquet for Mr Schindler.
Ambulance Superintendent Joshua Smyth said the bystander potentially saved Mr Schindler’s life.
He was flown to John Hunter Hospital via helicopter.
The couple were extremely fit and involved in a range of intensive water sports and running competitions.


Mr Schindler recently completed the Sydney Marathon in a time of 2 hours and 59 minutes in August.
That same month he gained an Open Water Scuba Instructor certificate from the Professional Association of Diving Instructors.
He completed a diving instructor’s course at a Bondi dive centre last week and graduated with a Master of Arts degree at the University of Technology Sydney in the second semester of 2025.
Mr Schindler also worked as a gymnastics coach from 2016 to 2018 before becoming a first lieutenant in the Swiss Armed Forces in 2019.
He studied for his Bachelor of Business Administration at the University of St Gallen, where Ms Mühlheim also studied, in 2024.
Ms Mühlheim was a former synchronised swimmer and a member of Swiss club Swim Regio Solothurn.
The club paid tribute to her in a heartfelt statement last week.


‘It is with deep sadness that we announce the death of Livia Mühlheim, former artistic swimmer and active judge,’ the statement read.
‘She died in Australia – in her beloved element, the water. On behalf of the club, we express our sincere condolences to the family.’
Ms Mühlheim studied her master’s in Accounting and Finance at the University of St Gallen, in Switzerland, and had been hired by a financial consulting firm in 2024.
This was the fifth fatal shark attack in Australia this year with the most recent less than three months ago, when a man was killed in Sydney’s northern beaches.
Ms Mühlheim’s death comes less than three months after a different shark fatally attacked Mercury Psillakis, 57, 300km south at Dee Why in September.
A report is being prepared for the coroner.





