In 2004, Ramduan Armitage, a Thai woman discovered on the body of the Yorkshire Dales, was detained by a Thai police.
David Armitage, a university lecturer, was detained in Bangkok in Bangkok after a visa survey.
According to the BBC, Armitage, who has a resident visa, was detained on Thursday at Kanchanaburi's home and was transferred to the Bangkok immigration management center while the authorities were preparing to erase visa.
Ramduan was born in Udon Turny in the northeastern Thailand, and was found by a walking group in Pennine Way in September 2004 between Ribsdale peneegend and Horton.
The detectives initially thought that Ramduan had died naturally, but the unresolved team announced that Ramduan was killed in 2018.
Armitage lives in Thailand after his wife's death, but has not filed his wife's missing report, and has not heard about his wife's whereabouts.
A victim's family living in Thailand began to say that she hasn't contacted her since 2004 after the North Yorkshire police looked at her electronic fit.
According to them, she married a British man in 1991 and moved to the northwestern part of England four years later.
Investigations on Ramduan's death are being conducted by the North Yorkshire Police.
A spokeswoman in charge of the unit told the BBC that he knew Armitage's restraint, saying, “This is related to his visa qualification and residence in Thailand, completely entering the Thai Royal Police. I understand that it is a problem of the administrative bureau. “
“We understand that if Armitage is expelled abroad, he has the right to go, including returning to the UK.
“If that happens, we will make every effort to talk to him again about the investigation.”
Armitage had previously told Sun Paper that he was not involved in his wife's death.





