Read Dead Wrong: Straight Facts on the Country's Most Controversial Cover-Ups Online
Authors: Richard Belzer,David Wayne
Tags: #History, #United States, #General, #Political Science, #History & Theory, #Social Science, #Conspiracy Theories
•2:00-4:00 AM: Search on foot
“Half a dozen” officers search outside for Dr. Kelly, although the search is largely in the area very near his home.
•2:50-4:05 AM
Actual time of first aerial search
Analysis: Note that the helicopter was reportedly equipped with high-tech heat-seeking equipment which should have been able to locate Dr. Kelly’s body had the body actually been present at the time of the search. His body temperature still registered twenty-four degrees Celsius at 7:15 PM the following day, therefore, it would have been high enough to register on the heat-seeking equipment at the time of this search. It was also only four days after Full Moon which would have further facilitated said search.
•4:30-5:10 AM
Actual time of second aerial search
•5:30 AM
Meeting takes place at Abingdon Police Station, attended by Assistant Chief Constable Page, Sergeant Paul Wood (a police search advisor, the Detective Inspector for the area, and the local head of Special Branch (British equivalent to Intelligence/ Security). ACC Page testified that at this time: “My concerns were that Dr. Kelly had gone out for a walk, perhaps become ill, perhaps had an accident befall him, possibly had been abducted against his will, possibly was being detained.” Analysis: Note that, although the police have had substantial input from family members, etc., and have brainstormed together about the case, still, at this late hour, suicide was not even mentioned as a possibility.
•6:00 AM
Police forces are marshaled and sent out to what are now considered the five or six most likely locations Dr. Kelly could have disappeared (Harrowdown Hill is at number two on that list). Other constables are also called in from surrounding areas to assist and a call also goes out to the South East Berkshire Emergency Volunteers and search dogs. Detective Constable Graham Coe begins conducting door-to-door inquiries.
•6:30-7:30 AM
During this period, a force of thirty to forty officers are on outward search from the Kelly home.
•7:15 AM
The South East Berkshire Emergency Volunteers arrive at the Abingdon Police Station, are briefed on the situation and set out on their search with scent dogs.
•8:00-8:25 AM
Dog picks up scent
Two volunteer searchers, Louise Holmes and Paul Chapman, and their search dog Brock, a highly-trained Collie, are searching the area to which they had been assigned—the woods between Harrowdown Hill and the Thames River. Brock the Collie picks up a scent and then indicates that he has found something, by returning and barking to Louise Holmes. Typically, responding as trained, he always takes his handler directly to what he has found. On this occasion, however, the search dog would not do so. Oddly, he refused, and would only direct his handler to what he had found, declining to approach the area himself.
•8:30 AM—Dr. Kelly’s body is found in the woods
Louise Holmes locates a body in the woods at Harrowdown Hill. She shouts to fellow volunteer Paul Chapman to call the police. Chapman calls emergency 999 and soon gets a callback from Abingdon Police Station. The volunteers are told to wait in their car for police. On their way back to their car, they encounter three police intelligence detectives (C.I.D.) who had been walking towards the river. They were not aware that a body had been found. Two were identified as District Constable Graham Coe and District Constable Shields—the third man has never been identified. DC Coe told volunteer Chapman to show him the body and Chapman led him there. Coe then told Chapman to return to his car and wait for additional police.
•8:30-9:00 AM
DC Coe is then alone with the body for about half an hour and there have been numerous inconsistencies in the evidence ever since:
“The volunteer searchers who first came across Dr. Kelly both described him as sitting upright. Mr. Chapman, from a distance of some fifteen to twenty meters, told the inquiry that Dr. Kelly’s body was ‘sitting with his back up against a tree’. Ms Holmes concurred, saying that Dr. Kelly’s head and shoulders were just slumped back against the tree.’” DC Coe, however, testified to what has become the official version, which is that Dr. Kelly was laying out flat on the ground. Analysis: The two searchers do not even note the small cut on Dr. Kelly’s wrist because there is actually very little blood. Quite a long period of time passes, under the circumstances, before paramedics are summoned. The apparent reason that it was untenable for the body to be in an upright position becomes quite clear when we examine the forensic evidence below regarding the directional trail of dried vomit stains.
•9:40 AM—Emergency call finally received at Abingdon Ambulance Station
An emergency call is received that a body has been found at Harrowdown Hill and an ambulance is dispatched there.
•9:55 AM—Emergency Paramedics Arrive
Two paramedics, Dave Bartlett and Vanessa Hunt, arrive at the scene. They are struck by the large number of all types of law enforcement personnel present: police from the”special armed response units” and others, some in civilian clothing, “others in black jackets and army fatigues.” They park their ambulance and are led into the woods by two armed-response officers, walking about one mile and carrying their resuscitation equipment. They locate the body and assess the status of the victim: Hunt checks for a pulse and Bartlett shines a flashlight in the eye looking for a pupil reaction. They place four electrodes on the chest and try to detect any heart activity. There is none. Analysis: There is now evidence that the body has been moved. The two paramedics both note that the body is laying flat on the ground, as opposed to sitting up against a tree as the two search team members found it. Observe that the fact that the body was moved post-mortem means that a cover-up was already operational during the search. Had the investigation been an authentic one, they would not have moved the body to conform to other evidence. There would have been no reason to move it.
•10:07 AM—David Christopher Kelly is Declared Dead
The paramedics are clinically trained emergency medical personnel who are well experienced in death scenes, having been paramedics in ambulance crews for over fifteen years each. Assessing the victim and the crime scene, the first thing that strikes them is the virtual absence of blood. They have witnessed “successful” wrist-slashing crime scenes: Vanessa Hunt described that as “like a slaughterhouse.” And they note that the differences were dramatic. They do not see anything close to adequate evidence of a suicide. Paramedic Vanessa Hunt testified :
“The amount of blood that was around the scene seemed relatively minimal ... no obvious arterial bleeding. There was no spraying of blood or huge blood loss or any obvious loss on the clothing.”
“There wasn’t a puddle of blood around. There was a little bit of blood on the nettles to the left of his left arm. But there was no real blood on the body of the shirt. The only other bit of blood I saw was on his clothing. It was the size of a 50p piece, above the right knee on his trousers . When somebody cuts an artery, whether accidentally or intentionally, the blood pumps everywhere. I just think it is incredibly unlikely that he died from the wrist wound we saw.”
Paramedic Bartlett was in complete agreement with his partner. He recalled being at one attempted suicide where the blood actually shot all the way up to the ceiling and recalled the details of it:
“Even in this incident, the victim survived. It looked like The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and the guy walked out alive. We have been to a vast amount of incidents where people who have slashed their wrists, intentionally or not, most of them are taken down to the hospital and given a few stitches, then sent straight back home. But there is a lot of blood. It’s all over them.”
Bartlett even commented on the weakness of the wrist wound while at the crime scene:
“I remember saying to one of the policeman, it didn’t look like he died from that ... “
The paramedics also document clearly visible dried vomit stains running from the corners of the victim’s mouth, directly downwards to his ears on both sides.
Analysis: Note that the dried stains running to both ears are consistent with the body position because it is now laying flat on the ground. Had the victim been leaning up against a tree—as he indeed quite obviously was—gravity would have made the trails come down the victim’s front, not back to his ears. The logical inference is that the body was moved postmortem to rectify the inconsistency.
•10:55 AM— Helicopter lands at Harrowdown Hill
Information finally released in 2011, only as a result of requirements related to a Freedom of Information Act request, revealed that a helicopter landed at the site where Dr. Kelly’s body was found, approximately ninety minutes after his body was discovered. However, the document is so redacted (blacked out for”national security” reasons) that it is not even possible to discern the purpose of the helicopter, who was on board, or who requested it. Thames Police refused to comment. Analysis: As with just about everything else with this case, there seems to be no sense of responsibility to explain actions reasonably, conduct affairs logically and in a trustworthy manner or, for that matter, to even lend the appearance of actually trying to ascertain the truth about these matters. As Dr. Andrew Watt, one of the doctors who has brought the official version under much-deserving pressure, puts it: “If the purpose of the helicopter flight was innocent, one has to ask why it was kept secret.” Timeline constructed from:
“The Lord Hutton Inquiry—Evidence”, August 27- September 2, 2003, Hearing transcripts; Report of the Inquiry into the Circumstances Surrounding the Death of Dr David Kelly C.M.G., Lord Hutton, January 28, 2004; http://www.the-hutton-inquiry. org.uk/content/report The Hutton Inquiry—Evidence, Ministry of Justice, United Kingdom. http://www.the-hutton- inquiry. org.uk/content/ evidence-lists/evidence030903.htm
The Strange Death of David Kelly,
Norman Baker MP (Member of Parliament), 2007;
“Did Two Hired Assassins Snatch Weapons Inspector David Kelly?’, Norman Baker, October 22, 2007, Daily Mail. http:// www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&cod e=BAK20071022&articleId=7155
“Kelly Death Paramedics Query Verdict”, Antony Barnett, December 12, 2004, The Observer. http://www.guardian. co.uk/uk/2004/dec/12/politics.davidkelly
“Dr. Kelly’s Final Email to a Friend: Dark Actors Playing Games”, Jamie Macaskill, July 20, 2003, The Sunday Mail. http://www. rense.com/general39/kellyy.htm
“Police ‘Ignored’ Dr David Kelly’s Mobile Phone Records: Police investigating the death of the Government weapons inspec-tor Dr David Kelly ignored mobile phone records which could have shed light on his movements before he died, it has been claimed”; Andy Bloxham, January 7, 2011, The Telegraph “Mystery Helicopter Claim Over Dr. David Kelly Death: Police have refused to comment on reports that a helicopter mysteriously landed at the scene of weapons expert Dr. David Kelly’s death shortly after his body was discovered,” May 25, 2011, The Telegraph.
With Dr. Kelly, we must ask the same question we asked regarding Vince Foster: The scientist clearly possessed a highly gifted intellect and a methodical mind, and with certainty, there were much more efficient methods of committing suicide than dashing off into the woods equipped only with a very dull gardening knife. Therefore, we must ask ourselves why a methodical scientist would select a most inefficient method of suicide. The identical effect could have been achieved much more efficiently; and surely, a scientist would have selected
methodically
the most efficient method.
It has been established that there was
official foreknowledge
of the impending death of Dr. Kelly: The Thames Police Department set up its
Operation Mason
thirty minutes prior to the time Dr. Kelly even left his home for his afternoon walk. We are told that
Operation Mason
was a “tactical support operation” on Kelly’s behalf. An intelligence source in the U.K. has explained that its security services obtained intelligence on an assassination attempt against Dr. Kelly and
Operation Mason
was to deal with that threat. Well, assuming that’s true, here’s a question for them: Why didn’t they just call him on his cell and tell him to sit tight until some uniforms got there and, in the meantime, don’t do anything dangerous,
like taking a long walk in the woods by yourself?
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Member of Parliament Norman Baker took a year off from his duties as Chair of the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee for the express purpose of researching Dr. Kelly’s highly suspicious death, resulting in his well- researched and thoroughly documented book,
The Strange Death of David Kelly.
In that work, he dissects the wrongful ruling of “Suicide” in a manner much the same as seen here. He concluded that, at the time of Dr. Kelly’s death, everything in the Administrations of the U.S. and Great Britain were acutely geared toward “justification for a pre-emptive strike on Iraq” and that “the death of Dr. Kelly was central” to that issue and took place within that “highly charged atmosphere.”
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