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Investigations continue into death of Judiann Myles
There have been developments in the mysterious death of Judiann Myles, a senior government official whose body was discovered inside a burning vehicle last month in Bodden Town.
During their annual crime and traffic press conference, police confirmed that forensic evidence indicates the fire that engulfed the car was deliberately set.
Judiann Myles, 47, was the head of the Anti-Money Laundering Unit at the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority. Her remains were found on the afternoon of 3 April inside a white Honda CR-V parked in an empty lot in Lookout Gardens.
Inspector Dian Dyer-Alexander, who heads up the investigation, said the case remains active and high-priority.
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Cayman Compass
Judiann Myles car fire ‘deliberately set’ but no confirmation if case is murder
Police investigating the death of Judiann Myles confirmed on Wednesday that forensic evidence indicates that the car in which she died was deliberately set alight, but stopped short of defining the the case as a murder investigation.
Myles, 47, the head of the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority’s anti-money laundering unit, was found dead inside a burning car on the afternoon of 3 April in an empty lot in Lookout Gardens in Bodden Town.
Inspector Dian Dyer-Alexander, speaking at a press briefing on crime statistics Wednesday, said the case had not yet been officially classified as murder because police are still awaiting forensic results.
