Saturday 20 August 2011

The Death of David Kelly - Were "third parties" present?

One of the lines of so-called "logic" followed by Thames Valley Police, Lord Hutton and Dominic Grieve is that the death of David Kelly can't be murder because the presence of "third parties" can be excluded.

How sound is the evidence supporting that contention?

In my view it is fragile in the extreme (at least in terms of any evidence that has been publicly disclosed).

I have spent many hours reading the Hutton Inquiry transcripts and documents and the documents released more recently by Dominic Grieve. The "evidence" that no third parties were present is appallingly thin.

So far as I can trace the "conclusion" that no third party was present rests significantly on assertions by Assistant Chief Constable Michael Page on pages 195 and 196 of his evidence given on the afternoon of Tuesday 23rd September 2003:


16 A. Yes, certainly. Very early on in the inquiry one sets
17 up a series of hypotheses which one tries then to knock
18 down. For the sake of completeness the first of these
19 would be: was the death natural or accidental? In this
20 case it is fairly obvious that was not the case. The
21 next question is: was it murder? I think as I pointed
22 out in my last evidence, the examination of the scene
23 and the supporting forensic evidence made me confident
24 that actually there was no third party involved at the
25 scene of the crime
and therefore, to all intents and

196
1 purposes, murder can be ruled out.
2 One is then left with the option that Dr Kelly
3 killed himself.


For the moment let's put aside that we know that ACC Page lied to the Hutton Inquiry about the matter of fingerprints on the dental records, The Death of David Kelly - Unreliability of the evidence of ACC Page regarding the dental records, and assume that ACC Page wasn't lying about this matter.

There are two pieces of supposed "evidence" that led ACC Page to his conclusion.


  1. The examination of the scene

  2. The supporting forensic evidence



The examination of the scene

In his evidence given on the morning of Tuesday 16th September 2003 (page 24), Dr Nicholas Hunt refers to "the lack of obvious signs of trampling of the undergrowth".

So we learn that there was nothing "obvious". At least nothing "obvious" to Nicholas Hunt.

However, as I demonstrated in small experiment, The Death of David Kelly - A tiny experiment in the woods the signs in vegetation of the presence of a person can be fleeting in the extreme.

The lack of "obvious" signs of trampling, at least when on grass, are of minimal or no significance.

Is there firmer evidence on this matter that slips my mind?

Of course, one should not overlook the fact that any trampling at or close to the scene by Louise Holmes, Paul Chapman, Graham Coe, Dave Bartlett, Vanessa Hunt, PC Franklin, PC Sawyer and SOCO Andrew Hodgson wasn't "obvious" to Dr. Hunt.

Any trampling by those eight individuals would have been much more recent than trampling by any "third party" at the crime scene.

The supporting forensic evidence

Is there any?

I'm not aware of any systematic analysis.

There is, implicitly, no obvious DNA evidence of a third party handling the body.

Yet, we know that Dave Bartlett and Vanessa Hunt handled the body at the scene.

But their DNA wasn't detected.

So how can we be confident that the absence of any other DNA "proves" the absence of a third party at the scene?

Answer - we can't. The "logic" of Grieve and his cover-up cronies is deeply flawed. And is, in my view, wholly unreliable.

2 comments:

  1. I have visited Harrowdown Wood on several occasions and I can confirm that there is very little vegetation in the area around the mature trees where the body was found. It therefore follows that there could not have been very much evidence of trampling to any vegetation if there was no vegetation near the body for anybody to trample on.
    There is dense vegetation as mentioned by some of the witnesses but it is around the southern and western perimeter of the wood. As the area where the body was found could be accessed with relative ease from the track to the east of the wood there was no logical reason why anybody should have attempted to climb through this dense vegetation. The absence of any such trampling to this vegetation is therefore a complete irrelevance.
    Detection of footprints around the body would also be very difficult as the ground would have been hard, after all it was the middle of summer, the area in question is under mature trees and the soil is Oxford Clay which does set very hard when dry.
    Frank

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  2. Frank,

    I think that the issues which you mention would usefully be expressed by you in a letter to the Attorney General.

    As far as I can see at present, the supposed absence of a third party at the scene is a flimsy smokescreen.

    At least the supposed "evidence" underlying the assertion is grotesquely weak.

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