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Jayla Lord (born Mahira Anand) was an American convicted murderer. She is most well-known for her escape to India, deportation to the United States, and the subsequent legal battles that followed between her and the City of Milwaukee regarding her crimes.

Early life
Mahira Anand was born on December 21, 2022, in the city of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Her father, Manoj Anand, was a receptionist while her mother, Hayaa Devadhikar, was a firefighter with the City of Milwaukee. Both of Anand's parents hailed from the city of Mumbai, India, and both worked to teach their daughter their native language of Marathi. Anand grew up in a small urban home within Milwaukee with her mother and maternal half-sister, just a few blocks away from her estranged father. Anand had a troubled childhood, with Anand stating in a police interview, "My father's wife - Miley and I called her 'Scary Tina' - would constantly mess with me when I was little. Playing 'pranks' and games with me that I didn't understand, flat out ignoring me and berating me because she thought it was funny to see me cry." At the age of five, Anand was enrolled into St. Serena's Elementary, where she was known as a below-average student who paid little attention to classes and constantly got into fights with other children. Most notably, Anand got into a physical altercation with her half-sister at the age of nine. By eleven years old, Anand allegedly began her relationship with one D'Marcus Butterfield, a similar troublemaker at Anand's middle school. The two continued their relationship well into their high school years, with Anand reportedly entering a verbal altercation with her father over the subject when she was fifteen. After her mother's death in 2040 and her suffering of a miscarriage a year later, Anand supposedly snapped under the mental pressure, leading to the killing of her father.

Murder of Manoj Anand
On the morning of December 30, 2022, the body of 48-year-old Manoj Anand was discovered face-down in Muskego Lake by two local fishermen, who immediately contacted law enforcement. Initially believed to be a suicide by first responders,