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Author Topic: Police could not find any fingerprints on Dr Kelly's 'suicide' knife  (Read 827 times)
bigron
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« on: October 15, 2007, 11:29:23 AM »

 Police could not find any fingerprints on Dr Kelly's 'suicide' knife

ANDY DOLAN UK Daily Mail / Monday October 15, 2007
http://prisonplanet.com/articles/october2007/151007Kelly.htm

 Fresh doubts were raised over the suicide of Dr David Kelly after it emerged that no fingerprints were found on the knife he supposedly used to kill himself.

The Hutton Inquiry into the death of the Ministry of Defence weapons expert ruled that he slashed one of his wrists with a blunt garden knife and took an overdose of pills.

But the campaigning Liberal Democrat MP Norman Baker has carried out his own investigation after forensic experts questioned the official version of events.


He has called for the case to be re-opened after Thames Valley Police revealed that no fingerprints were found on the knife.
The Lewes MP made the discovery after submitting a Freedom of Information request to the force.
The lack of fingerprints is especially strange as police records also revealed the germ warfare expert was not wearing any gloves when he died – nor were any found at the scene of his death.

Mr Baker said: 'It is one of the things that makes me think Dr Kelly was murdered.

'The angle you pick up a knife to kill yourself – there would be fingerprints. Someone who wanted to kill himself wouldn't go to the lengths of wiping the knife clean of fingerprints.

'And wearing gloves would seem very odd when you are about to cut your own wrists. It is very strange.'

Mr Baker is also suspicious about the cut to Dr Kelly's wrist.

It completely severed a tiny blood vessel called the ulnar artery, which is deep in the wrist and protected by nerves and tendons.

It is highly unlikely anyone without a blood-clotting defect would bleed to death from a single cut to this artery.

It would have required unusual force to cut through the tendons, particularly with a blunt gardening knife, and it would have been very painful.

To ascertain just how unusual the injury was, Mr Baker asked the Office of National Statistics how many people in the UK died in 2003 from a cut to the ulnar artery.

He was told that Dr Kelly was the only one. The scientist was found dead in woodland near his home in Southmoor, Oxfordshire, in July 2003 after becoming trapped at the centre of a vicious war of words between the Government and the BBC.


His death came days after he was unmasked as the source of a Today programme report alleging Labour had 'sexed up' a dossier outlining the case for war in Iraq.
The document had famously claimed that Saddam Hussein could launch a nuclear or biological weapons strike on Britain within 45 minutes.

Dr Kelly, a father of three, was grilled on TV by MPs on the Foreign Affairs Select Committee.

His widow, Janice, claimed her husband had been put under 'intolerable pressure'.

But Lord Hutton exonerated the Government and ruled that Dr Kelly's death was a suicide – leading to accusations that the inquiry had been a whitewash.

Independent doctors have pointed to discrepancies in the post-mortem examination results.

They say neither the cut to Dr Kelly's wrist nor the drugs he took were enough to kill him.

Friends and relatives said the doctor had shown no suicidal tendencies, and had been looking forward to his daughter's wedding.

However, Mrs Kelly remains convinced that her husband killed himself and refused to comment on the latest development.

A Thames Valley Police spokesman said: 'It has been confirmed that there were no fingerprints on the knife whatsoever. This however does not change the official explanation of his death.'


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bigron
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« Reply #1 on: October 15, 2007, 11:32:19 AM »

This whole affair smelled very bad even before hiss apparent suicide.

I am convinced still today that he was definitely murdered by the NWO

It is very good that the investigation will now continue.........
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DAVIDENGLAND
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« Reply #2 on: October 15, 2007, 11:37:18 AM »

What's the point of this?? There's no way the truth will come out ever, it never does. All they do is postpone the inquests and inquiries until it's forgotten about, then they appoint a Lord (same team) to preside over the matter. We know the truth we don't need authority to comfirm it for us, which of course they never will so why bother with them at all??
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jannerbob
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« Reply #3 on: October 15, 2007, 05:38:16 PM »

Dr Kelly did not die because of coproxomol poisoning,not enough tablets ingested.He did not die because of a slashed wrist,not enough blood loss.Now there is no fingerprints on the knife,a knife of which was not sharp enough to cause the damage sustained.Hutton called it a clear case of suicide.That is proof enough for me that he is a liar and i believe in the philosophy that if you lie once anything else you say has a high probability of being another lie.The British have been lied to constantly for a very long time,we may never get the truth but at least we can spot the lie from a mile off.Kelly was murdered,no doubt about it.
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Dig
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« Reply #4 on: October 15, 2007, 06:10:58 PM »

A little history might be in order care of wiki:

David Christopher Kelly CMG (May 17, 1944 – July 17, 2003) was an employee of the United Kingdom Ministry of Defence (MoD), an expert in biological warfare and a former United Nations weapons inspector in Iraq. Kelly's discussion with Today Programme journalist Andrew Gilligan about the British government's dossier on weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in Iraq inadvertently caused a major political scandal. He was found dead days after appearing before the Parliamentary committee charged with investigating the scandal.

The Hutton Inquiry, a public inquiry into the circumstances surrounding his death, ruled that he had committed suicide and that Kelly had not in fact said some of the things attributed to him by Gilligan. Norman Baker, Liberal Democrat member of Parliament, who spent a year investigating Kelly's death, has rejected the official findings, saying that the official account of suicide was implausible because the means Kelly was said to have chosen is an unlikely and ineffective means of suicide. Baker contends that the most likely cause of death was murder.[1]
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