Homicide investigators in Surrey have identified a body found in a burned-out SUV Wednesday as 19-year-old B.C. college student Bhavkiran Dhesi.

The vehicle, which belonged to Dhesi’s family, was found shortly after 12:20 a.m. near 24 Avenue and 188 Street. The SUV was still burning when crews arrived, and was extinguished quickly by firefighters.

Police confirmed in a statement that Dhesi, who had recently recovered from a kidney transplant, was the victim of a homicide.

Investigators told reporters Thursday they think the young woman was killed in a different location from where her body was found.

On Wednesday, Cpl. Meghan Foster suggested the SUV might have been set ablaze to cover up the crime.

IHIT believes that Dhesi, who went by the name Kiran, was targeted, but that her death was not related to gang activity. Dhesi, who was not known to police, was last seen leaving her family’s Surrey home at 9 p.m. on Tuesday. She was supposed to meet with friends that night.

Those who knew the victim say she did not have a reputation for getting into trouble.

“She never got involved with the cops--never got in trouble,” Alishia Rai, who has known Dhesi since elementary school, told CTV News, adding that the 19-year-old was “a very happy, very caring person.”

“Whoever did this…that’s not right what they did,” Rai said. “She didn’t do anything wrong to anybody to even deserve it.”

IHIT and the RCMP are still trying to determine a motive in Dhesi’s murder, as well as her whereabouts prior to the incident.

“Police are working tirelessly to advance this investigation and want to speak with any friends and acquaintances that knew Miss Dhesi,” Foster said in a statment Thursday. “This death is a crushing blow to Miss Dhesi’s family, and they are suffering terribly.”

No suspects have been identified, but investigators say they are speaking to “persons of interest.”

Anyone with information is asked to contact IHIT at 1-877-551-4448 or Crime Stoppers anonymously at 1-800-222-8477.

Victim remembered as a 'free and caring person'

As friends and family mourn her death, those close to her say they’ll remember Dhesi for her happy, carefree personality.

“She was very outgoing—just a very free and caring person. That’s who she was,” Rai said.

“Back when I was in elementary school…whenever I see her, she’s always laughing and smiling. That’s what I’ll miss most about her.”

With files from CTV Vancouver’s Nafeesa Karim