Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Lonely Death of Man Who Found Saddam’s Anthrax (David Kelly)
Times of London ^ | July 19, 2003

Posted on 07/18/2003 5:08:02 PM PDT by Shermy

EXACTLY what made Dr David Kelly’s life suddenly unbearable will be the focus of political recriminations for years to come.

The pioneering weapons inspector who uncovered Saddam Hussein’s secret anthrax programme was incensed at his treatment by a committee of MPs and frustrated that his own evidence to them had been flawed.

Dr Kelly apparently found it impossible to live with his inner torment.

At 3pm on Thursday he left his house, saying he was going for a walk. Paul Weaver, a farmer, spotted the scientist on a footpath more than a mile from his home. The only oddity was why the keen rambler was alone, instead of walking with his wife and daughters as usual.

Dr Kelly headed through wheatfields to a wood on Harrowdown Hill near Faringdon, about five miles from his home. His family alerted police that he was missing at 11.45pm and, after an all-night search using a helicopter, a body was found at 9.30am.

Dr Kelly seems to have been frustrated that his evidence to the Foreign Affairs Select Committee may have inadvertently played down his role as a source for Andrew Gilligan’s BBC allegations.

“His wonderful semantic precision let him down during that meeting,” Tom Mangold, the former Panorama reporter and a friend of Dr Kelly, told The Times. “He said he didn’t think he was Andrew Gilligan’s one source. He should have said he didn’t recognise part of Andrew Gilligan’s submission.”

Dr Kelly, 59, a married father of three, had vainly hoped that his appearance before the committee would be cathartic. “For a man like David Kelly, who had worked with intelligence services around the world, to sit there and be told he was a prat and a fall guy was dreadful,” Mr Mangold said.

“He was an honourable, dedicated man. He volunteered this information to his employers at the MoD in the knowledge that he would probably go before a committee. He did not realise the committee would treat him with such contempt.”

Mr Mangold spoke to Dr Kelly’s wife, Janice, shortly after the body was discovered by the police at a beauty spot about a mile from their Oxfordshire home yesterday morning. “She said he was very upset by what had occurred on the committee and very angry,” Mr Mangold said. “Importantly, she did not use the word ‘depressed’. He was the bane of Saddam Hussein, who personally wanted him expelled from the country because he knew where ‘the bodies were buried’.”

Born in the Rhondda Valley, Dr Kelly’s first love was science. He studied for a BSc in bacteriology at Leeds University, took his doctorate at Oxford, then joined the Oxford Institute of Microbiology as a biological pesticide expert.

At the age of 40 he was offered a post dealing with biological warfare at Porton Down, Britain’s chemical and biological laboratory in Wiltshire. It is impossible to exaggerate Dr Kelly’s importance throughout the long campaign to disarm Saddam of his bio-weapons arsenal.

In 1988, while Dr Kelly was working at Porton Down, Iraq tried unsuccessfully to obtain a weapons-grade strain of anthrax from the laboratory. At about the same time, Saddam did manage to get some anthrax from the United States.

Dr Kelly led the first team of United Nations biological weapons inspectors to Iraq in 1991, discovering a factory that could have produced enough anthrax to fill several Scud missiles.

Highly trusted by the Ministry of Defence, he used to help with interviews of defectors, and sat in on debriefings that took place when people returned from overseas postings. He always had access to secret intelligence material.

Beneath a softly spoken façade was a steely individual who wanted only to spend his final year before retirement hunting weapons in Iraq.

Dr Kelly’s role in Iraq and at the UN in New York brought him into frequent contact with journalists, who relied on him to explain the minutiae and complexity of biowarfare. It was against this background that he agreed to meet Mr Gilligan, the BBC defence correspondent, freshly back from the Iraq war, at the Charing Cross Hotel in London on May 22.

Dr Kelly, who was by then serving as adviser to the MoD’s director of counter-proliferation and arms control, hoped to do some debriefing of his own. But he omitted to get authorisation for the encounter.

He later told the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee that he did not believe he was the “main source” of Mr Gilligan’s Today programme report on BBC Radio 4 that the Government had “sexed-up” a dossier on Iraq’s weapons.

But he did admit that the name of Alastair Campbell, the Prime Minister’s director of communications and strategy, came up during the conversation.

Asked whether he had said anything that Mr Gilligan might have interpreted as identifying Mr Campbell “sexing-up” the dossier, Dr Kelly dodged the question. “I find it very difficult to think back to a conversation I had six weeks ago,” he said.

And the man whose semantic precision was a source of wonder to his admirers concluded: “It does not sound like the sort of thing I would say.”

Dr Kelly, the father of Rachel and Ellen, twins aged 30, and Sian, 33, was a homely sort. He was a horserider and he was often seen cutting the grass and tending the large garden of his 18th-century farmhouse in the village of Southmoor, near Abingdon. He was a member of the cribbage team at his local pub, the Hind’s Head. He would drive the minibus to rival pubs because he drank only mineral water since giving up beer some years ago.

Dr Kelly’s family formed a local history society and produced publications on local villages.

His spiritual solace was the Baha’i faith, a monotheistic religion that believes that Moses, Krishna, Buddha, Zoroaster, Jesus and Muhammad were all God’s messengers. At one time, he served as treasurer of the Spiritual Assembly in Abingdon.

The Baha’i faith seeks the unification of humanity in one global society. They believe that barriers of race, class, creed and nationality are being broken down, leading ultimately to a universal civilisation.

One of the purposes of the Baha’i faith is to help make this possible. The worldwide community of some five million Baha’is is representative of most of the nations, peoples and cultures on Earth.

“David was held in deep respect by everyone who knew him. He was a man of enormous integrity,” Manoocher Sammi, a friend and fellow executive of the Baha’i faith, said.

Detectives took a computer and files from Dr Kelly’s home yesterday.

A police source ruled out hanging, an overdose, a gunshot wound or natural causes in his death.


TOPICS: Anthrax Scare; Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: 2003obituaries; 2003obituary; anthrax; antraz; davidkelly; deadmicrobiologist; iraq; iraqaftermath; michellepfieffer; obituary; saddam; saddamhussein; suicide; wmd
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-80 ... 101-103 next last
To: Shermy
Tony Blair's Vince Foster?
41 posted on 07/18/2003 5:45:54 PM PDT by DoctorMichael (>>>>>Liberals Suk. Liberalism Sukz.<<<<<)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: aristeides
Died from normal 'radiation'......?

UR-anium?

.....'sickness'.......?

:-(

42 posted on 07/18/2003 5:46:25 PM PDT by maestro
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 36 | View Replies]

To: McGavin999
Hmmm.. That's a good, intriguing point. However, assuming the specialist had that sort of information, wouldn't the British authorities in charge of the search already be aware of that? In other words, what possible good could offing him do to someone trying to prevent the finding of WMDs when any info he may have of that sort would already be in circulation within the UK intelligence & defense circles?

If one must speculate, then it's infinitely more plausible he knew something to be false which the British government wishes not to have doubt cast upon...

43 posted on 07/18/2003 5:48:32 PM PDT by AntiGuv (If at first you don't succeed, don't try skydiving!!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 37 | View Replies]

To: JBCiejka
I don't see anywhere that it rules out slashed wrists.

And if his wrists were slashed, and all his blood was making a stream towards the lower ground, I am thinking that might be a way to rule out natural causes (although there was an episode of "Millennium" called "Powers, Principalities, Thrones and Dominions" where a guy slashed his own neck, but it turned out that he really died of a heart attack, but that was TV).

44 posted on 07/18/2003 5:49:50 PM PDT by William McKinley (You're so vain, you probably think this tagline's abotu you)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 26 | View Replies]

To: Shermy
His wife said he was very upset by what happened with the committee but that he was very angry. Not depressed and angry men may kill someone else but they do not commit suicide! Arkancide in the UK, shut him up good!
45 posted on 07/18/2003 5:51:46 PM PDT by wingnuts'nbolts
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: AntiGuv
Didn't we have a weapons scientist found dead in his car a while back? It was kind of mysterious.
46 posted on 07/18/2003 5:52:58 PM PDT by virgil
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 34 | View Replies]

To: Shermy
Arkancide
47 posted on 07/18/2003 5:53:20 PM PDT by Henk
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: NotJustAnotherPrettyFace
"Arkancide" in the UK?!

Maybe. I always thought that Tony Blair was cut from the same cloth as Bill Clinton. His lap dog following of Bush has not changed that opinion.

48 posted on 07/18/2003 5:55:49 PM PDT by Mike4Freedom (Freedom is the one thing that you cannot have unless you grant it to everyone else.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 16 | View Replies]

To: wingnuts'nbolts; Henk; archy
Since he's a microbiologist "Memphicide" might be appropriate too.

Sure a strange story, whatever happened.

49 posted on 07/18/2003 5:56:17 PM PDT by Shermy
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 45 | View Replies]

To: genefromjersey
Ping
50 posted on 07/18/2003 5:56:31 PM PDT by Calpernia (Runs with scissors.....)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 46 | View Replies]

To: Henk
ARK-and-cide?

Ur-anium.....rays?

:-(

51 posted on 07/18/2003 5:57:46 PM PDT by maestro
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 47 | View Replies]

To: Shermy
Since he's a microbiologist "Memphicide" might be appropriate too.

Sure a strange story, whatever happened.

Auto.........'Hit-n-run'??

52 posted on 07/18/2003 6:00:19 PM PDT by maestro
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 49 | View Replies]

To: virgil
There have been several bioweapons scientists dead under mysterious circumstances over the past year or two. I'll see if I can track down an article (I vaguely remember one in Toronto's Globe & Mail).

I think you're thinking of the Russian who formerly worked in the Biopreparat bioweapons research during the Soviet era who was murdered in Britain not too long ago.

53 posted on 07/18/2003 6:00:51 PM PDT by AntiGuv (If at first you don't succeed, don't try skydiving!!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 46 | View Replies]

To: Shermy; Betty Jo
Well, Dr. Wiley's strange death didn't occur too far from Arkansas. It was on the bridge between Memphis and Arkansas, wasn't it?
54 posted on 07/18/2003 6:01:15 PM PDT by aristeides
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 49 | View Replies]

To: virgil; aristeides
Oh, wait. That's right. You're thinking of the Harvard [?] doctor found dead downstream of Memphis (his car was left on a bridge).
55 posted on 07/18/2003 6:02:43 PM PDT by AntiGuv (If at first you don't succeed, don't try skydiving!!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 46 | View Replies]

To: Shermy
Well, we may never learn what happened, but this begins to sound more like suicide to me. The guy probably was some kind of liberal idealist who leaked to the BBC. It sounds as if he blamed somebody by name for lying about the Uranium story and then tried to fudge what he said at the hearing.

Sometimes really bright guys like this are politically stupid. I'll bet he told the BBC reporter a few things "off the record" and then was surprised when they appeared in print, no doubt together with a few assorted lies and similar goodies the reporter made up.

The article says he was mad at the committee for saying that he was a patsy. Problem is, he was a patsy. He thought he was saving the world and instead he played the fool.
56 posted on 07/18/2003 6:04:56 PM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: AntiGuv
I think thats the one. They kept mentioning his car and the east coast ( the Harvard connection). My memory is failing. Thanks.
57 posted on 07/18/2003 6:05:25 PM PDT by virgil
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 55 | View Replies]

To: newfreep
sorry, wrong Arkancide.

It is taking too long to divulge the whole story. It cannot be all that complicated. That suggests that they are trying to work out a believable cover story and make sure that there is not absolute contradictory evidence around.

58 posted on 07/18/2003 6:05:46 PM PDT by Mike4Freedom (Freedom is the one thing that you cannot have unless you grant it to everyone else.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 39 | View Replies]

To: wingnuts'nbolts
I'll bet this turns out to be suicide.

http://www.itv.com/news/2093141.html

Television journalist Tom Mangold said he had spoken to Kelly's wife, Janice, on Friday morning, and she said her husband had felt stressed after appearing before the parliamentary committee to face questions about the BBC report.

"She didn't use the word depressed, but she said he was very, very stressed and unhappy about what had happened and this was really not the kind of world he wanted to live in," Mangold told ITV news.
59 posted on 07/18/2003 6:05:46 PM PDT by Republican Red
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 45 | View Replies]

To: Republican Red
I'll bet this turns out to be suicide.

Well, of course. That is always the best cover. It happens often enough to be believable and you don't have to make believe you are investigating a murder.

60 posted on 07/18/2003 6:07:46 PM PDT by Mike4Freedom (Freedom is the one thing that you cannot have unless you grant it to everyone else.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 59 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-80 ... 101-103 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson