Foul play is suspected after a former police oversight commissioner was found dead in her Ann Arbor, Michigan, home by officers conducting a welfare check, the department said Thursday.
The death of Jude Walton, 51, is being investigated as a homicide. A police spokesman said there was evidence of forced entry to the home’s backdoor and “obvious signs of trauma on her body.”
No arrests have been made. An autopsy is scheduled for Friday to determine the cause of death, spokesman Chris Page said.
Police were called to the home on Chapin Street around 1:30 p.m. on Thursday after her employer said she had not shown up for work. She was last seen by a neighbor around 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Page said.
“Once officers arrived and entered the home, they discovered the body of a 51-year-old Ann Arbor woman,” a police news release states.
Walton was a former commissioner of the Independent Community Police Oversight Commission, according to the news release. The Commission was created as a way to foster a better relationship between residents and the police and to ensure “smart, equitable, community-oriented policing that the Ann Arbor Police Department strives for and that our community deserves,” its website says.
Walton was a commissioner from the group’s inception and left last year. It was created by ordinance in 2018 and began its work in 2019, Chair Stefani A. Carter said.
“We are extremely saddened to hear of her death and we lift her family and friends up in prayer at this terrible time,” Carter said in a statement.
She also worked as a Director of Employee Experience at Avalon Housing, which provides housing solutions to the homeless community. She had been with the organization for 14 years.
Read the full article here