Deputies say a woman drove her shot and battered boyfriend to a field and torched him alive inside his car.

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Deputies say a woman drove her shot and battered boyfriend to a field and torched him alive inside his car.

An Indiana woman, Amy Singhas, 43, is among several individuals charged in connection with the killing of her boyfriend, 58-year-old Michael Greer, who was found shot and burned to death inside his vehicle. According to the Delaware County Sheriff’s Office, deputies responded around 3:45 a.m. on Dec. 14, 2025, to a report of a vehicle fire in a rural area of Delaware County, about 60 miles northeast of Indianapolis. When authorities extinguished the flames, they discovered a body inside the burned car.

Investigators later determined that Greer had allegedly been beaten and shot at a home in Indianapolis before being wrapped in fabric and transported to the rural field, where the vehicle was set on fire. An autopsy reportedly revealed that Greer was still alive when the fire began.

Multiple Arrests and Alleged Plot

Singhas faces numerous felony charges, including murder, arson resulting in serious bodily injury, kidnapping, criminal confinement, obstruction of justice, and conspiracy to commit murder. Authorities also arrested 23-year-old Ameariss Aponte, who faces charges including murder, arson, and obstruction of justice. Court documents allege that Singhas drove Greer’s car to the field with him in the back seat before Aponte got behind the wheel and drove it off the road prior to the fire being set. Both reportedly admitted to their roles in disposing of the vehicle.

At least three additional individuals — Tallis McCoy, Randal Moon Jr., and Megan Sloan — were also charged with murder, arson, and obstruction of justice. Sloan has been ruled incompetent to stand trial. Officials have not publicly disclosed a motive for the killing.

Ongoing Proceedings

Singhas is scheduled for a pretrial hearing on March 16, with a jury trial set for May 12. The other defendants’ cases remain pending as they move through the court system.

In his obituary, Michael Greer was remembered as someone who “touched the hearts of everyone who had the privilege of knowing him,” and as a man whose unwavering love for family and friends defined his life.

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