The supposed Sydney fraudster Melissa Caddick has been found dead, yet the NSW Coroner says it is difficult to decide how she died
The 49-year-old hadn’t been seen since November 2020
Specialists accepted she had taken more than $23 million when her house was assaulted.
The supposed Sydney fraudster Melissa Caddick has been found dead, yet the New South Grains Coroner says it is difficult to decide how or where she died.
The 49-year-old hadn’t been seen since November 2020, soon after the Australian Protections and Speculations Commission (ASIC), a corporate guard dog, struck her Dover Levels home in Sydney’s east.
Financial backers purportedly lost somewhere in the range of $20 and $30 million in a supposed Ponzi plot run by Caddick, which ASIC had been investigating. Specialists accepted she had taken more than $23 million when her house was struck.
A decaying foot that appeared on a NSW South Coast ocean side three months after Caddick evaporated was perceived as having a place with her through DNA testing, yet an examination couldn’t discover the reason for death.
The New South Grains agent state coroner, Elizabeth Ryan, said “I have presumed that Melissa Caddick is expired. Be that as it may, an additional tricky issues is whether the proof is adequate to empower a positive finding of how she died and how and when it worked out.”
While deciding if her body previously entered the water at precipices near her home, oceanographers affirmed at an examination that endured half a month.
Officer Ryan expressed that it was “unquestionably conceivable” for Caddick to have ended it all in like that, yet he couldn’t reach any further determinations. There have been no affirmed sightings of Caddick or CCTV pictures of her in any waterfront region, as per Judge Ryan, and the clinical proof supporting a tumble from a level is “impartial.”