A BRITISH WOMAN arrested on suspicion of strangling an Irish woman to death at a Benidorm apartment was remanded in custody last night by a judge.
The 64-year-old, who has not been named, was held in a police cell for three nights and taken to court on Saturday over the ongoing criminal probe.
The victim has been named in Spain as 66-year-old Catherine ‘Cat’ Peckham, said to have been born Catherine Murray and originally from Co Cork.
It’s understood that deceased woman was strangled with the flex of a vacuum cleaner, which was later found around her neck and taken away for DNA testing.
The suspect will continue to be investigated on suspicion of homicide while she is in custody. Formal charges have yet to be laid.
State prosecutors requested the British woman’s prison remand, approved by a judge, because of the seriousness of the allegations she is facing and the fact she didn’t have a permanent address and could pose a flight risk if released on bail.
A court official said: “A magistrate at Benidorm’s Court of Instruction Number Two acting as a duty court, decided to remand the woman arrested last week in custody around midday on Saturday.
“She will continue to be investigated on suspicion of a crime of homicide.”
Under Spanish law suspects can be held in prison on remand for up to two years without charge.
Prosecutors can apply for a further two-year extension under exceptional circumstances which has to be approved by a judge.”
Spanish police released a short statement last Thursday, saying both the dead woman and the suspected killer were both from the UK.
They are not expected to release any more information about the case to the press.
A spokesman for the National Police in Alicante, confirming the arrest around midnight on Wednesday, said last Thursday morning: “A woman aged 64 has been arrested on suspicion of killing another 66-year-old woman, both from the UK.
“The investigation is ongoing and at the moment we can’t give out any more information.”
Officers have yet to respond to the fresh reports about the dead woman being Irish.
Benidorm
The apartment where the crime happened is in Benidorm’s Rincon de Loix neighbourhood which is home to its famous Little England area.
It was sealed up with police tape after the horror killing and a message on the blue and white tape across the door said in Spanish: ‘Police line. Do not cross.’
Two mobility scooters identical to the ones used by thousands of British holidaymakers and expats in the Costa Blanca resort were parked by the door to the flat.
A subsequent report in a local Spanish paper, which police have not commented on, said the suspect was welcomed into her alleged victim’s home four days before the crime while she was trying to find more permanent lodgings.
This has not been confirmed by detectives and she is thought to have opted to remain silent when she was questioned by police and then subsequently by a judge on the advice of her defence lawyer.
Although police have confirmed an arrest, they have not made any official comment on how they believe the homicide occurred.