Murdered Teacher Was Wanted in US, Police Say
Cambodia Daily | July 14, 2014
A 44-year-old American man found murdered last week in Phnom Penh
was the subject of a criminal investigation by U.S. authorities before
his death, a local police official said Sunday.
Mississippi native William Glenn came to Cambodia two months ago from
Bangkok and worked at several English language schools in the city, but
was discovered on Wednesday morning strangled to death on a dirt road
in Prek Pnov district’s Kok Roka commune.
Suon Samoeun, chief of Kok Roka commune police, said Sunday that
though the murder investigation has yet to establish a motive or
identify a suspect in the crime, U.S. officials informed him that they
had been seeking William Glenn’s arrest prior to his death.
“Embassy officials confirmed that the victim was wanted by the U.S.
authorities, which were trying to find him to send him back to the U.S.
because he is a criminal,” Mr. Samoeun said.
Officials from the U.S. Embassy on Thursday accompanied Cambodian
police to two Phnom Penh guesthouses where William Glenn stayed and
removed his belongings from the Tattoo Guesthouse in Prampi Makara
district, where he last stayed.
Asked Sunday whether CCTV footage from the guesthouses had revealed any clues, municipal penal police chief Eng Sorphea said that U.S. authorities had taken the evidence for examination.
“We don’t know anything because we sent it to the embassy,” he said.
U.S. Embassy spokesman John Simmons said that due to privacy laws, he
could not discuss the case, but he denied the U.S. Embassy was involved
in the investigation.
“We are doing what we can to assist Cambodian authorities, but it is the Cambodian police’s investigation,” he said.
The victim’s wife of five years, 44-year-old Nittaya Glenn, said on
Friday that her husband, from whom she separated two months ago, had
repeatedly told her that he could not return to the U.S. but had never
disclosed the reason.
She said the FBI came to her house in Bangkok last week.
“They called me and had a meeting in my home and I gave them lots of information,” she said.
Ms. Glenn said her husband went to the U.S. Embassy in Phnom Penh on
July 7 to get additional pages put in his passport because he wanted to
leave Cambodia immediately for China.
“He texted me to say he was worried because the embassy took his passport from him and he didn’t know why,” she said.
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