I know it looks like I killed my Thai wife who was found dead in the Yorkshire Dales – but I can prove my innocence

I know it looks like I killed my Thai wife who was found dead in the Yorkshire Dales – but I can prove my innocence

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I know it looks like I killed my Thai wife who was found dead in the Yorkshire Dales – but I can prove my innocence
Author: Robin Perrie
Published: Jan, 31 2025 21:37

THE Sun tracked down university lecturer David Armitage to his remote Thai home to ask if he had any part in his wife’s suspicious death – and he dodged the question. Instead, he hid behind the advice of British Embassy staff not to comment about the intriguing mystery of his Thai wife Lamduan’s murder. So I went for the blunter approach: “Let me put it another way, David. Did you kill Lamduan?”.

 [David Armitage, husband of Lamduan Armitage, photographed in Kanchanaburi, Thailand.]
Image Credit: The Sun [David Armitage, husband of Lamduan Armitage, photographed in Kanchanaburi, Thailand.]

Only then did he ignore Embassy officials and protest his innocence. The portly English lecturer, now 62, said: “Absolutely not. No, absolutely not. I know the inferences are there but I am just getting on with my life here.”. He promised to answer the rest of my questions about the Lady of the Hills case — named after the unidentified, partially-clothed body was found in a mountain stream in the Yorkshire Dales in 2004 — once the dust had settled.

 [Photo of Lamduan Seekanya in Thailand.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Photo of Lamduan Seekanya in Thailand.]

And he said he was happy to speak to cold-case detectives who were taking a fresh look at the discovery of what turned out to be Lamduan’s body. That was six years ago, and Armitage has evaded every attempt to quiz him since — by me and the police. But all that could now change after Thai immigration officials decided to deport him. He was detained last week at the same house where I confronted him, and was taken to a detention centre in Bangkok, where he is now contemplating his future behind 20ft fences topped with barbed wire.

 [Older couple holding a framed photo of their daughter.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Older couple holding a framed photo of their daughter.]

According to immigration sources who have spoken to him, that future involves the dramatic plan to return home in a bid to clear his name. He is free to go anywhere once he leaves Thailand. But his current Thai girlfriend and his son George, a 32-year-old teacher, are said to have persuaded him to return to the UK so he can tell police he had nothing to do with Lamduan’s murder. A source told The Sun: “George is obviously aware of everything that has happened over the last few years and everything that has been said — as is David’s girlfriend.

 [Hiker with trekking poles crossing a stream in a mountainous area.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Hiker with trekking poles crossing a stream in a mountainous area.]

“They have persuaded him to go back to the UK to clear his name. “He is free to go anywhere when he leaves Thailand, but in reality he only has one option — back to Britain. “He had the choice of appealing the decision to revoke his visa within 48 hours but he did not take it.”. If Armitage does return and speaks to police it may finally shed some light on a case which has baffled them for more than two decades.

 [Memorial plaque on a rock:
Image Credit: The Sun [Memorial plaque on a rock: "The Lady of the Hills. Found 20th Sept 2004. Name not known. Rest in peace."]

They have persuaded him to go back to the UK to clear his name. It began on September 20, 2004, when hikers doing the 24-mile Three Peaks walk stopped for a photo by a stream near one of the peaks, Pen-y-ghent, where the partially clothed body of a woman lay in the water — which was shown in their picture. A post-mortem failed to establish a cause of death, although she had not been shot, stabbed or drowned.

 [English teacher David Armitage with his son in a cafe.]
Image Credit: The Sun [English teacher David Armitage with his son in a cafe.]

Police were unable to identify her and she was dubbed the Lady of the Hills by locals, who arranged for her funeral in the nearby village of Horton-in-Ribblesdale. A cold-case review finally led to her identification in 2019 when a relative living in the UK saw an artist’s impression in a police appeal and alerted detectives. As officers were waiting for test results on DNA samples taken from her parents Buasa and Joomsri, I travelled to Thailand to speak to her Yorkshire-born husband.

 [Timeline of the Lady of the Hills murder investigation.]
Image Credit: The Sun [Timeline of the Lady of the Hills murder investigation.]

He married Lamduan in 1991 after they met in the Thai city of Chiang Mai, and they moved to Portsmouth, where Armitage taught at a further education college and Lamduan washed dishes at a Thai restaurant. They later moved to Rugby, Warwickshire, and by the summer of 2004 were staying with Armitage’s parents in Cumbria. Lamduan’s mum Joomsri told how her daughter had reported difficulties in the marriage, but after a final phone call in 2004 she never heard from her again.

 [View of the Yorkshire Dales landscape from Pen-Y-Ghent.]
Image Credit: The Sun [View of the Yorkshire Dales landscape from Pen-Y-Ghent.]

She recalled: “She said she missed home so much. “It was a very short call. We’ve not heard from her since.”. Armitage moved back to Thailand with their two children shortly after Lamduan vanished. When I caught up with him 15 years later he was working as a university lecturer in Kanchanaburi, the town where 1957 war movie The Bridge On The River Kwai was set. There is all this innuendo and I’ve got no comeback on it in a country which is not mine.

He had never reported his wife missing, and according to Lamduan’s parents, he had told their children that she had left them to go back to Thailand to marry another man. When Armitage answered the door at his whitewashed bungalow next to a banana plantation, he said there had been a whispering campaign against him in the Thai media, but insisted he was innocent. He said: “There is all this innuendo and I’ve got no comeback on it in a country which is not mine. I do feel for the parents.

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