by Sue Reid of the Daily Mail
http://educate-yourself.org/cn/waskellymurdered06mar04.shtml
March 6, 2004
LORD
HUTTON was confident he had uncovered the truth. In Room 76 of the Royal
Courts of Justice, he declared that Britain's most eminent microbiologist,
David Kelly, killed himself by slashing his left wrist with a garden knife
after swallowing a batch of painkillers.
The scientist at the heart of the maelstrom over Iraqi weapons
of mass destruction had found the pressure unbearable. Publicly outed for
an illicit conversation with a BBC radio journalist, he was terrified of
losing his job and, at 59, he committed suicide. Lord Butler's conclusions,
founded on countless hours of testimony, are clearly solidly based. Yet
there are a growing number of people who voice grave doubts over whether
this is how Dr Kelly died in an Oxfordshire wood during a summer night last
year.
Even before Lord Hutton's historic judgment, Mai Pederson,
an American army intelligence officer and confidante of Dr Kelly, said the
scientist would never have taken his own life.
More intriguingly, she explained that he hated all types of
pill. He even had trouble swallowing a headache tablet.
Admittedly, Pederson is a shadowy figure who declined to present
herself in person to the Hutton Inquiry. Yet her doubts have been endorsed
by a number of respected doctors who say David Kelly cannot have died from
blood loss or painkiller poisoning, certainly on the evidence presented
to the law lord.
A public health consultant at Birmingham University has gone
further. Dr Andrew Rouse told the British Medical Journal's website that
a successful suicide by wrist slashing is so rare that the Office of National
Statistics does not even list such an act separately as a cause of death.
Now these eminent doctors have been joined by others - among
them lawyers, business executives and former intelligence officers - asking
for answers to a series of worrying questions.
The Kelly Group, as this body styles itself, has written to
the Oxfordshire coroner, Nicholas Gardiner, urging that a full inquest into
the scientist's death be held. It was announced this week that Mr Gardiner
will decide on this matter after a special hearing later this month.
'As concerned citizens, including amongst our number a specialist
surgeon and diagnostic radiologist, we have closely scrutinised the testimonies
given at the Hutton Inquiry,' the group wrote to him.
‘We consider that neither the police investigation nor
the Hutton Inquiry has demonstrated with any degree of rigour that Dr Kelly
took his own life.’
'We contend that the possibility that Dr Kelly's death was
murder dressed up as suicide has not been sufficiently explored. We believe
that the death should be treated as suspicious until a full battery of evidence,
including independently performed forensic evidence, has proved conclusively
otherwise.
So is this the conspiracy theory of over-fertile minds? In
pursuit of an answer I painstakingly looked at evidence to the Hutton Inquiry.
I talked to those who insist stones have been left unturned
in the quest for truth. My own inquiries have revealed riddles and inconsistencies
that, undoubtedly, back up the doctors' public unease about how Dr Kelly
died.
But first we must go back to 3.30pm on Thursday, July 17.
when the scientist left his home in the village of Southmoor to take his
regular afternoon walk. Nine hours later, at 12.20am, when he had failed
to return home, his wife Janice desperately rang Thames Valley Police to
report her husband missing.
The next morning, at 9.20am, Dr Kelly's body was discovered
by a border collie named Brock on Harrowdown Hill, a mile from the scientist's
home.
Brock and his owner, 22-year-old Louise Holmes of the Thames
Valley Lowland Search Team, were assisting the police in their quest to
find Kelly.
With another volunteer, Paul Chapman, they had been trawling
the woods for 80 minutes when Brock started barking and ran back to Louise.
Unusually, the trained search dog sat on the ground as if alarmed by something.
It was left to Louise to walk to the spot where Brock had first began to
howl.
She told the Hutton Inquiry that she found the body with the
head and shoulders slumped against a tree. Chapman, 15 yards behind, recalled
specifically that Dr Kelly was sitting up. 'His legs were in front of him.
His right arm was to the side of him.
His left arm had a lot of blood on it and was bent back in
a funny position,' said Louise, who stood beside the body for a couple of
minutes. Crucially, neither she nor Chapman, a Scoutmaster, reported seeing
much more blood around the body.
Neither did they mention to the Hutton Inquiry seeing a Sandvig
gardening knife, a discarded and somewhat bloodied watch, even an opened
Evian water bottle, which were all recorded by police and ambulance paramedics
when they arrived half an hour later.
After the grim discovery, Louise rang the police at Abingdon,
who promised to send a team of officers immediately. She and Chapman then
began walking down the path towards their car. It was at this point that
they met three men dressed in civilian clothes who said they were 'Thames
Valley detectives', one of whom showed his identity card. The volunteer
searchers directed the men to the site of the body and went on their way.
From
evidence to the Hutton Inquiry and an interview given to a local newspaper
by Louise, it is clear that the time was then 9.30am. What happened next
is a matter of conjecture.
But what we do know is that the three 'detectives' were left
alone at the site for 30 minutes before the uniformed police assigned from
Abingdon arrived at around 10am. Louise Holmes and Paul Chapman say that
they found Dr Kelly's body propped up against a tree. Yet the Abingdon police
contingent insisted to Lord Hutton that they discovered the microbiologist
lying flat on his back. All subsequent witnesses gave the same story.
Not only did the body appear to have been moved, but crucially
the pruning knife, water bottle and watch were suddenly being mentioned
by witnesses at the scene.
At the Hutton Inquiry, Thames Valley detectives said they
did not touch Dr Kelly's body. But the intriguing puzzle does not stop there.
Central to the controversy is the small amount of blood found on, or near,
Dr Kelly and the question of whether he could have died from his knife wounds.
Paramedic Vanessa Hunt, part of an ambulance team which spent
around 15 minutes at Dr Kelly's side, told the Hutton Inquiry: 'There was
a small patch on his right knee, but no obvious arterial bleeding. There
was no spraying of blood or huge blood loss or any obvious loss on his clothing.'
It was this key disclosure that has so worried British doctors,
including 63-year-old David Halpin, former consultant in trauma at Torbay
Hospital, Devon, and the radiologist Dr Stephen Frost, now based in North
Wales.
The doctors contacted the Kelly Group and wrote to a national
newspaper. They said: 'To die from haemorrhage, Dr Kelly would have had
to lose about five pints of blood. It is unlikely from his stated injury
that he would have lost more than a pint.'
Another medical expert and Fellow of the Royal College of
Pathologists, Dr A Peter Fletcher, added in a letter to the press: 'Anybody
who has seen five pints of blood spurted forcefully out of a severed artery
will know that there is one hell of a mess.’
'The two searchers who found the body did not even notice
that Kelly had incised his wrist with a knife.' A fifth medic, Professor
Simon Kay, a plastic surgery consultant at Leeds Teaching Hospital, was
even more robust when he entered the Dr Kelly debate.
He said: 'The popular view that a slit wrist is likely to
prove fatal is far wide of the mark. The natural and protective response
of a divided artery is to constrict and prevent life-threatening haemorrhage.
'Ways around this might include lying in a hot bath... but
certainly do not include lying in a cold field.' There are other tantalising
questions. Why did David Kelly, a world-class scientist, choose to kill
himself with what emerged at the Hutton Inquiry to be a blunt knife? And
why did he choose the ulnar artery, deep inside the wrist, which is hard
to get at and extremely unlikely to lead to death?
Martin Birnstingl, one of the country's most respected vascular
surgeons, insists it would be virtually impossible for Dr Kelly to die by
severing the ulnar artery on the little finger side of his inner wrist.
Mr Birnstingl was until recently President of the Vascular Surgical Society
of Great Britain and is a former consultant at Barts Hospital, London.
He told the Mail: 'I have never, in my experience, heard of
a case where someone has died after cutting their ulnar artery. And I have
seen plenty of suicides.
'The minute the blood pressure falls, after a few minutes,
this artery would stop bleeding. It would spray blood about and make a mess
but it would soon cease. 'Kelly was in the know. He was a scientist. People
normally try to slash the radial artery in their wrist, the one which is
used to take a pulse. Or if they are really intent on death, they cut the
artery in their groin.'
At the very least, it was an extraordinarily painful and uncertain
suicide method for the former head of microbiology at the research establishment
of Porton Down; a man who was a world authority on toxic substances.
Equally intriguingly, it would have been almost impossible
for the right-handed Dr Kelly to have slashed from left to right on his
opposite wrist, missing the superficial pulse-taking artery and cutting
deep into the ulnar artery.
There is also the matter of the three packs of the painkiller
Co-Proxamol found in Dr Kelly's coat pocket. They are believed to have been
taken by him from his arthritic wife's medical cabinet, although this was
never confirmed at the Hutton Inquiry.
And Dr Kelly's own doctor said he had never prescribed him
Co-Proxamol.
When Dr Kelly's body was found, all but one of the 30 tablets
were missing. Could these 29 tablets on their own have been responsible
for ending his life?
According to the Hutton Inquiry, they did not. Only a fifth
of a tablet was later found, during an autopsy, in Dr Kelly's stomach.
Moreover, the blood reading of each of the drug's two components
was less than a third of what would normally be found in a fatal over- dose
victim.
What then of the scientist's mental state? As Dr Kelly set
out on that last walk, it was clear that he was deeply unhappy. Although
Lord Hutton said he was not suffering from any mental problems, the future
must have appeared gloomy.
A letter from the Ministry of Defence, found unopened on Dr
Kelly's desk, spoke of a possible disciplinary hearing.
Undoubtedly, he would have been told of its unpleasant contents
before its arrival at his home in the days before his death. What must have
been going on in Dr Kelly's head?
His hopes of returning to his beloved Iraq were disappearing
fast. Ironically, he had as many enemies there - where he challenged Iraqi
scientists with formidable zeal over their weapons' programmes - as he did
in Britain. When Dr Kelly interrogated one British-trained Iraqi woman scientist
at the centre of Saddam Hussein's chemical warfare efforts, his questioning
was so tough that she ran screaming from the room. In Iraq, he was perceived
as a tough opponent.
Dr Kelly had himself predicted in jest in only February 2003
that if Iraq was attacked, he might be found 'dead in the woods'.
Meanwhile, in Whitehall he was being viewed as a somewhat
troublesome employee; perhaps a liability in the world of defence intelligence
in which he moved.
Dr Kelly was not prepared to cut his media links or be permanently
silenced. Was he now viewed as a security risk?
Had his extraordinary and unorthodox friendship with the Egyptian-American
Mai Pederson - one that was barely tolerated by the Ministry of Defence
— begun to count against him?
Controversially, he had been discussing book projects with
Victoria Roddam, an Oxford publisher who, in an e-mail to the scientist
only a week before his death, wrote: 'I think the time is ripe now more
than ever for a title which addresses the relationship between Government
policy and war - I'm sure you would agree?' She seemed to expect a positive
response.
There were other puzzles, too. Immediately the news of his
suicide broke, Dr Kelly's dental records were discovered to be missing from
his personal file at the local surgery.
His woman dentist, according to the Hutton Inquiry, reported
the mystery to police after finding an unlocked window at the surgery.
Yet - mysteriously - two days later the records reappeared
back at the surgery in Dr Kelly's buff file. Their temporary disappearance
so concerned the police that a DNA test was run on Dr Kelly's body to ensure
it was really him.
Among the bundles of evidence submitted to the Hutton Inquiry
is also an intriguing secret document marked: 'Not for Release. Police Information
Only’
The document, according to an audit of evidence in the public
domain, records a tactical support operation by Thames Valley Police during
what it terms a ‘major incident' on July 17 and July 18 of last year
when Dr Kelly was missing. It was called Operation Mason.
Thames Valley Police has told the Daily Mail that the Operation
Mason file details their investigation into the circumstances surrounding
Dr Kelly's death.
The audit shows that Operation Mason ended at 9.30am on July
18 as the two searchers with the dog Brock walked away from Dr Kelly's body
to meet, by chance, the three detectives.
But more extraordinary was the time Operation Mason is said
to have started: at 2.30pm on July 17. Bizarrely, that is exactly one hour
before Dr Kelly set out on his final walk. And nearly ten hours before his
distressed wife rang the police to sound the alert over her missing husband.
The contents of the Mason file remain strictly confidential.
Scanned from today's Daily Mail
(Sent by RowenaThursby@onetel.net.uk)
To join Kelly Investigation Group mailing list contact: RowenaThursby@onetel.net.uk
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