
Uncovering the Truth
about the Death of David Kelly
A Review Article
by Rowena Thursby
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=
THU20060917&articleId=3249
www.GlobalResearch.ca
September 17, 2006
The Kelly Investigation Group (KIG) is
a loose affiliation of professionals and laypeople from
all walks of life; it includes nine doctors, four of them
surgeons, and a QC. Medical and legal expertise has
ensured our objections to the the official line on Dr
David Kellys death are taken seriously by the media
and public, even if the authorities affect to ignore
them. Our aim is to ensure agents of the state do not
bury the truth, along with Dr Kelly.
SUSPICIONS FROM THE START
During 2002/3 it was obvious to many that the search for
WMD in Iraq was a disingenuous ploy to secure regime
change. Blair and his aides had claimed that it would
take only 45 minutes for Saddam to launch a CBW attack on
British bases, and that mobile laboratories found in Iraq
were
for the purpose of making chemical/biological weapons. In
asides to journalists Dr David Kelly had shot both
assertions down in flames. So when he was found dead
in the woods three days after being hauled before a
televised government committee, many of us were highly
suspicious.
Why were Thames Valley police labelling Dr Kellys
death a suicide before his body had been
examined? At the age of 72, judge and law lord Brian
Hutton had never before chaired a public inquiry - so why
did the prime ministers old friend Charles Falconer
appoint this safe establishment figure at such
extraordinary speed*?
As the Hutton Inquiry got underway in August 2003, I
pored over the transcripts in an attempt to understand
exactly how Dr Kelly had died. I listed aspects of the
case that did not add up, and joined an internet forum to
correspond with others working in a similar vein. One was
IT
expert Garrett Cooke.
INITIAL PLEA TO THE CORONER
On 20th November 2003 Garrett and I wrote a letter to
coroner Nicholas Gardiner explaining our concern that the
inquest had been subsumed into the Hutton Inquiry. In
particular, we listed the reasons why we felt a full
inquest with powers to subpoena witnesses and hear
evidence under
oath should be held:
*
Dr Kellys body
appeared to have been moved - twice
*
the knife, bottle of
water, glasses, and cap reported beside the body by later
witnesses, were not seen by the two volunteer searchers
who first discovered it
*
DC Coe was with the body
at the time its position changed from sitting to lying
*
DC Coe claimed he was with
one other officer yet five witnesses said he was with two
*
the primary cause of death
was given as haemorrhage from an incised wound to his
left wrist, yet the amount of blood at the scene was,
according to the paramedics, extremely sparse
*
vomit stains from the
corners of his mouth to his ears suggested Dr Kelly had
died on his back, yet his position when found was slumped
against a tree
*
the puzzling nature of the
wound: the severing of a single artery deeply embedded in
the left wrist and total avoidance of the more
superficial radial artery
We received
no response.
SECTION 17A MISAPPLIED
Later we discovered that to avoid an inquest, Lord
Chancellor Charles Falconer had invoked Section 17a of
the Coroners Act of 1988, citing as his reason
avoidance of duplication (having both an inquest and an
inquiry) and consequent distress to the Kelly family.
However, Section 17a was introduced in 199 at his
instigation to avoid unnecessary repetition (and mounting
costs) in cases of multiple deaths with a single known
cause, e.g. a train crash or a ferry disaster; Dr Kellys
was a single, high profile death of unknown cause. In
view of the political manoeuvres preceding this
high-profile death, one suspects the avoidance of distress
to the family was a very British excuse masking the real
reason: that the authorities did not want witnesses
subpoenaed and giving evidence on oath. Had the scientists
close female friends, Mai Pederson, Gabriele Kraatz
Wadsack and Judith Miller been subpoenaed we might have
been provided with a much more intimate portrait of
events leading up to his death.
BUILDING A MEDICAL CASE
Faced with the Coroners wall of silence, I decided
to try to secure medical support. I started a blog
listing a number of KIG concerns and wrote two articles
for the internet entitled - Dark Actors at the
Scene of Dr Kellys Death (October 2003) and
The David Kelly Story: Turning Murder into Suicide
(28 November 2003.) The latter was a critique of the
forensic pathologists evidence to the Hutton
Inquiry; for to me, his reasoning seemed in places, quite
farcical. On 29 November 2003 Dr Searle Sennett, a
specialist in anaesthesiology from Johannesburg,
responded to these articles by e-mail as follows:
/Dear Rowena /
/I have just read your piece at
rense.com and also the one at
propaganda matrix.com and I complement you on both of
these articles
but, more importantly, on your guts and preparedness to
take on the
Establishment. I am a retired specialist anaesthetist and
I too, without
knowing the details of the Kelly incident that you do,
considered the
whole suicide story to be phoney in the
extreme. I am quite satisfied
that cutting the ulnar artery in the manner described
could not have
been fatal. /
/He was clearly murdered in some other
manner and, in my opinion,
there are a variety of ways in which it could have been
done. /
/You did mention the use of a
chloroform-like substance, of which
there are many, and I can assure you that the modern
volatile
anaesthetic agents are extremely potent. They would not
necessarily kill
but could certainly cause unconsciousness in less than a
minute
especially if applied in high concentration. The subject
could then be
asphyxiated by means of a plastic bag over his head
which, in fact,
could also contain the agent. To show this technique is
distinctly
feasible, I mention the incident where a potent
anaesthetic agent was
introduced into the air-conditioning system of a Moscow
theatre and
which incapacitated and, indeed, killed the Chechen
terrorists and some
of their hostages.
Injectible muscle relaxants which
paralyse all muscles within
seconds and stop the breathing of the subject receiving
them. Although
normally intravenous, the injection could, in fact, be
given into any
muscle or even under the hair of the scalp, or elsewhere,
so as to avoid
subsequent detection. Muscle relaxants are part of the
lethal cocktail
injection used in many US prisons to carry out the death
sentence. /
/It will be very interesting to see
what approach Lord Hutton takes
concerning the inquest and whether he, too, attempts to
cover up the
obvious murder. Meanwhile, I am not surprised that Tony
Blair is
suffering from a variety of stress-related disorders! /
/Keep up the good work. /
/Your sincerely
Searle Sennett
Johannesburg /
Anomalies continued to accumulate, but things were set
alight when a friend sent me a letter published on 15
December 2003 in the Morning Star from orthopaedic and
trauma surgeon, David Halpin. Here was a surgeon, a man
with intimate knowledge of arteries, and how they behave,
saying he did not see how Dr Kelly could have died of
haemorrhage from transection of a single ulnar artery: I
write to enquire as to the status of the coroners
inquest into the death of Dr David Kelly. I hope that it
has not been subsumed within the Hutton Inquiry. He had
been put through the psychological mincing machine of the
elite running this country and it is easy to imagine his
sense of failure as well as betrayal in both directions.
We have been told that he died from a cut wrist and that
he had non-lethal levels of an analgesic in his blood. As
a past trauma and orthopaedic surgeon, I cannot easily
accept that even the deepest cut into one wrist would
cause such exsanguinations that death resulted. This one
point was key: the primary cause of death could not have
been haemorrhage because it is virtually impossible to
bleed to death from severing a single ulnar artery. Over
the ensuing weeks we honed and refined our case to
include arguments against the second and third causes of
death cited - poisoning by co-proxamol and
atherosclerosis. With Dr Sennett and David Halpins
continued input and support, the KIG was able to develop
a strong medical case against suicide. Around this time
we were joined by Jim Rarey, an ex-newspaper editor from
the US, who wrote seven articles for the internet on a
number of aspects of Dr Kellys death.
KELLYS DEATH A PHENOMENON ACCORDING TO STATISTICS
In January 2004 we were contacted by Dr Andrew Rouse,
Senior Lecturer in Public Health and Dr Yaser Adi, from
the Dept of Public Health & Epidemiology at the
University of Birmingham, who three months earlier had
submitted a letter to national newspapers:
IS DR KELLY A STATISTIC OR A PHENOMENON?
The pathologist who performed Dr Kellys autopsy
reported that The features
of Dr Kellys
wounds
were quite typical of self-inflicted illness.
Unfortunately he did not report that it is almost unheard
of for such wounds to result in death. Suicide associated
with wrist-slashing is extremely rare - so rare that the
Office of National Statistics does not report wrist
slashing as a specific cause of death; it groups such
deaths with other uncommon suicide methods such as belly
and abdomen stabbings and throat cuttings (see table)
This table shows that fewer than five 55-50 year old men
use cutting and piercing instruments to commit suicide
annually. This statistical evidence, combined with the
fact that even after searching the medical literature and
speaking to medical and surgical colleagues we have not
been able to document that wrist slashing can lead to
successful suicide, suggests that for all practical
purposes wrist slashing suicide does not exist in
Britain.
-------------------------
*Suicide and self inflicted injury by cutting and
piercing instruments
amongst males in England and Wales*
Year 50-54
55-59 60-64 65-69
1991 2 4 9 8
1992 5 6 4 1
1993 7 4 6 4
1994 2 3 3 6
1995 6 5 3 5
1996 6 4 4 5
1997 8 4 3 1
1998 7 7 2 8
1999 5 4 5 3
2000 9 3 2 4
*Av 5.5 4.4
4.1 4.5 *
*Data from: Twentieth Century Mortality, Office of
National Statistics,
London 2003*
-------------------------
We must also remember that Dr Kelly was a first rate
researcher. As such, before making a suicide attempt, he
would surely have done an internet or library search into
the success of various suicide methods. He would have
learnt that - since it invariably fails - wrist slashing
is not a recommended suicide method. There fore why would
Dr Kelly slash his wrist in the first place and against,
all odds, actually die?
MORE DOCTORS CHALLENGE OFFICIAL SUICIDE RULING
As the medical case challenging suicide became stronger,
we were happy to welcome in a new doctor - Chris
Burns-Cox, and two more surgeons - Martin Birnstingl and
William McQuillan. Birnstingl, a retired specialist in
vascular surgery from London responded enthusiastically
to a Kelly article with Count me in. He was a
foundation member of the Vascular Surgical Association of
GB and Ireland and President in 1986. In private e-mails
he wrote: Vascular surgeons deal with vessels of all
sizes but I have never seen or heard of anybody dying
from a cut wrist artery even when both ulnar and redial
have been cut Dr Kelly did not slit his wrists
as suggested by Professor Milroy. The evidence is that
one wrist was cut, dividing only one of the four main
wrist arteries, which is very unlikely to have been
fatal. During 2004 I made contact with a Dr C Stephen
Frost who had written a list of 35 questions about Dr
Kellys death on the Independent internet forum .
Working together, and liaising with the rest of the
medico-legal team, we managed to get five letters
published in the Guardian:
1. OUR DOUBTS ABOUT DR KELLYS SUICIDE 27 January
2004 signed by David Halpin, C Stephen Frost, Searle
Sennett
2. MEDICAL EVIDENCE DOES NOT SUPPORT SUICIDE BY KELLY 12
February 2004
signed by Andrew Rouse, Searle Sennett, David Halpin, C
Stephen Frost, Peter Fletcher, Martin Birnstingl
Our arguments met with a blustering emotional response
from Professor Chris Milroy in a letter entitled:
FANTASISTS & DR KELLY14 February 2004
3. QUESTIONS STILL UNANSWERED OVER DR KELLYS DEATH
19 February 2004
signed by Andrew Rouse, Searle Sennett, David Halpin, C
Stephen Frost, Peter Fletcher, Martin Birnstingl
4. NEW DOUBTS OVER KELLY 28 September 2004 signed by C
Stephen Frost, David Halpin, William McQuillan, Searle
Sennett
5. QUESTIONS OVER KELLY 28 December 2004 signed by Dr
Michael Powers QC,
Martin Birnstingl, Chris Burns-Cox, C Stephen Frost,
David Halpin, William McQuillan, Andrew Rouse, John Henry
Scurr, Searle Sennett
The first letter, published on 27 January to coincide
with the publication of the Hutton Report, caused a media
storm, and we were inundated with requests for radio and
TV appearances. David Halpin appeared on TV and radio in
the UK, and Dr Sennett gave newspaper interviews from his
home in Johannesburg. The Evening Standard ran a headline
on the evening prior to the publication of the Hutton
Report: Was Kelly Murdered? But since The
Sun chose to leak the Hutton Report a day ahead of
publication - and we think this may have been a
deliberate tactic - the angle of possible murder was not
pursued in the media the following day.
On 21 January 2004 five of us - David Halpin, Dr Searle
Sennett, Dr C Stephen Frost, Garrett Cooke and myself -
wrote an eleven-page letter to the Coroner setting out
our concerns in detail. He failed to respond. A month
later I phoned him to ask if he had received the letter -
he said he had noted the contents but did not think these
were sufficient grounds for concern. He had seen a police
report and was satisfied everything was in order.
On 31 January highly qualified pathologist Dr Peter
Fletcher wrote a
letter to the Daily Telegraph:
/Sir, /
/As a retired pathologist, I have been
dismayed by the lack of
information on the precise circumstances of the discovery
of Dr David
Kellys body. It is claimed that the major cause of
death was blood loss
from a severed wrist artery, possibly complicated by the
ingestion of an
unstated number of co-proximal tablets. An adult human
body contains
about 10 pints of blood, of which about half has to be
lost to cause
death. 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. The two paramedics who arrived at
the scene
later apparently stated that there was remarkably little
blood around
the body. /
/Something, somewhere is seriously
wrong. Either Dr Kelly did not
die of blood loss or it occurred at some place distant
from where the
body was found. It is, of course, possible that blood was
spattered
everywhere, which four witnesses failed to notice.
A coroner has the power of subpoena,
witnesses give testimony under
oath and a jury is usually involved. Lord Hutton was
denied these
requirements for his inquiry. /
/Dr A Peter Fletcher, Pathologist,
Halstead, Essex/
I contacted him and he too agreed to lend his support to
the KIG.
I was put in touch with lawyer Michael Shrimpton by an
e-mail correspondent and he joined the cause on 29
January 2004. The following month he was invited onto the
Alex Jones Show, one of the top conspiracy radio
programmes in the US. Unfortunately the slant he put on
Kellys death - that it was a hit
performed by the French DGSE - was not one shared by the
rest of the KIG; although allegedly received from
intelligence sources, there was no way of corroborating
it. We were frankly uneasy with his strong bias towards
the USs neocon administration.
On 8 February 2004 Andrew Rouse and Yaser Adi submitted
an adapted version of their original letter entitled
Hutton, Kelly and the missing Epidemiologyto
the British Medical Journal. They called for readers to
send in details of any 55-65 year old males who had
committed suicide by
slashing their wrist, during the previous 10 years.
Professor Milroy responded to their report by saying,
'The problem with use of statistics in any single case is
that unlikely does not make it impossible. In his
view the combination of all three causes on the death
certificate was sufficient to account for Dr Kellys
death. This had been the key tactic of KIG opponents: not
to examine one cause of death at a time, but if one cause
did not stand up, hop on to the next one, or even cite
all three as somehow working together --
hardly a scientific way to proceed.
Another surgeon - John Scurr - was quoted in a Washington
Post report, 21 February 2004.
I looked up his details and found him to be a practising
vascular surgeon, also London-based. David Halpin wrote
to him and he too become a willing participant in the
KIG. He has since appeared on Channel 4 News and in a US
documentary to be screened in 2007 - in both cases
explaining in his professional capacity why Dr Kelly is
highly unlikely to have bled to death from a single
transected ulnar artery. He put us on to his friend and
lawyer, QC Michael Powers. Once he had reviewed all
evidence accumulated by the KIG, it was his view that
there should have been a full inquest into Dr Kellys
death. On 29 February 2004 Renan Talieva, an e-mail
correspondent from the US, wrote a long and detailed
article derived from KIG discussions and her own
assiduous research entitled The Strange Suicide of
David Kelly.
CORONER SHUTS THE DOOR
Before the Coroner returned to court after reviewing The
Hutton Report, a letter from Michael Powers was published
by The Times declaring: Suicide cannot be
presumed. Even evidence pointing to the likelihood that
Dr Kelly took his own life is not sufficient. Suicide has
to be proved beyond reasonable doubt. After reviewing the
Hutton Report, coroner Nicholas Gardiner returned to
court on 16th March 2004 to announce his decision on
whether to re-open the inquest into Dr Kellys
death.
The same day David Halpin was interviewed by the Today
programme, and when Gardiner declared his satisfaction
with the Hutton Inquirys ruling of suicide, was
asked to comment.
Around this time, practising vascular surgeon John Scurr
and QC Michael Powers made separate appearances on
Channel 4 News. Mr Scurr explained why, in his view, one
cannot bleed to death from full transection of a single
ulnar artery while Michael Powers stated that by law,
suicide must be proved beyond reasonable doubt, and an
inquest was the only forum equipped to provide this
degree of rigour. In his view the medical evidence
provided since the Hutton Inquiry was sufficient to
warrant a full inquest. When phoned by the Channel 4 News
team, Dr Nicholas Hunt, the forensic pathologist to the
Hutton Inquiry, said that he too would be more
comfortable with a full inquest. On 13 May 2004
Renan Talieva answered the Coroners refusal to
reopen the inquest with an excellent and thoroughly
researched critique of the coroners actions in
The Coroner and David Kelly. In response to
the KIGs medical arguments, Professor Robert
Forrest, forensic toxicologist at Sheffield University,
set up the International Toxicology Advisory Group
and on 18 September 2004 had an article published in the
BMJ entitled Forensic science in the dock.
The Hutton Inquiry had conveyed the impression that Dr
Kelly may indeed have taken the 29 tablets missing from
the blister packs in his pocket, even though the
toxicologist stated that the amount he measured was only
a third a what is normally a fatal amount. But in this
article Forrest et al listed reasons why forensic science
was unable to specify the amount of drug a person had
taken prior to their death.
Post-mortem measurements of drug concentration
in blood have scant
meaning except in the context of medical history, the
sequence and
circumstances surrounding death, and necropsy findings.
The paucity of
evidence based science, coupled with the pretence that
such science
exists in regard to post-mortem toxicology, leads to the
abuse of process
"
In December 2004, in a 'Daily Mail' article entitled
Specialists demand a new Kelly inquiry it was
reported that medical and legal experts in the KIG were
arguing that it was vital to have an inquest. Michael
Powers called for backers to help him fund a legal
challenge against the coroners decision not to
reopen the inquest. It was discovered however, that
without a properly interested person to call
for a judicial review of the coroners decision, the
KIG could not proceed. A properly interested person
is a legal term for what in Coroners Law has to be
someone who stands to gain or lose by the death in
question. In practise, that could only have been Mrs
Kelly, and she made it clear in a private phone call that
she did not want the inquest re-opened because she was
convinced her husband had committed suicide. She claimed
to have studied the KIGs doubts about the official
reason for her husbands death, but gave few reasons
for her thinking it was suicide other than her husbands
anguish at the time. This was a blow which appeared to
shut the door on further progress. However we persevered.
PARAMEDICS UNHAPPY WITH OFFICIAL CAUSE OF DEATH I
contacted the two paramedics who had attended the scene
of Dr Kellys death and put them in touch with
Antony Barnett of the Observer. They arranged to meet
Barnett in the presence of their solicitor and gave him
the material for his 12 December 2004 article, Kelly
Death Paramedics Query Verdict where their shock at
the general absence of blood at the scene and scepticism
over the official cause of death was described in detail.
When the press arrived on their doorsteps, they gave a
televised
press conference.
MP NORMAN BAKER BEGINS HIS PRIVATE KELLY INVESTIGATION
It was not until MP Norman Baker came forward this year
(2006) to announce that he had resigned his seat on the
front bench to pursue a private investigation into Dr
Kellys death that the case was injected with new
life. According to a Guardian report: Mr Baker said he
wanted to return to the issue because the 2003 Hutton
inquiry had "blatantly failed to get to the
bottom of matters. He vowed to question ministers and to
unearth new facts in a bid to establish the
"truth" of the case. After a few months on the
case he wrote a major article for the Mail on
Sunday vowing to prove Dr Kellys death was
not suicide. His new finding was that the Coroner had
irregular and clandestine meetings with Department of
Constitutional Affairs officials and representatives of
the forensic staff just prior to the issuing of a full
death certificate - before Lord Hutton had even started
to examine the details of Dr Kellys death. Normally
a temporary death certificate is issued pending a full
inquiry. In this case it seems, the rules were bent.
In 2006 the KIG launched a NEW DR DAVID KELLY BLOG and is
now working in conjunction with Mr Baker. Significant
progress is being made. Watch this space
.
Dr Kelly was found dead on 18th
July 2003; Lord Hutton was appointed only a few days
later - on 22nd July.
-------------------------
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© Copyright Rowena Thursby, GlobalResearch.ca, 2006

The
death of Dr David Kelly
July: The body of scientist David Kelly was found
at the height of an acrimonious row between the BBC and
Downing Street over whether the government had 'sexed up'
evidence on WMD in Iraq. Photograph: Ian Waldie/Getty
|