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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
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To: virgil
It was Harvard biochemistry scientist Don C. Wiley - an expert in anthrax, ebola, AIDS, herpes, and influenza research.
61 posted on 07/18/2003 6:10:27 PM PDT by AntiGuv (If at first you don't succeed, don't try skydiving!!)
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To: Shermy
At least in the U.K. when a traitor is exposed, he takes the "honorable" way out.

Clinton should have been so honorable!
62 posted on 07/18/2003 6:13:25 PM PDT by steplock (www.FOCUS.GOHOTSPRINGS.com)
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To: virgil
Here's an intriguing webpage that just popped up as I was trying to track down something on all the microbiologists:

Did 22 SDI Researchers really ALL Commit Suicide?

63 posted on 07/18/2003 6:13:31 PM PDT by AntiGuv (If at first you don't succeed, don't try skydiving!!)
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To: AntiGuv
It was Harvard biochemistry scientist Don C. Wiley - an expert in anthrax, ebola, AIDS, herpes, and influenza research.

and,..............WEST NILE VIRUS.......????????????

64 posted on 07/18/2003 6:14:12 PM PDT by maestro
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To: AntiGuv
Well done. Do you know if the other 2 were called suicides too?
65 posted on 07/18/2003 6:15:08 PM PDT by virgil
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To: Shermy
So it's the committee's fault that he is dead? I find this extremely confusing.
66 posted on 07/18/2003 6:17:47 PM PDT by arasina (Conservatives, be CONFIDENT! [My new fightin' words!] WE WILL PREVAIL!)
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To: virgil
Vladimir Pasechnik was ruled a stroke, five days after Don C. Wiley's disappearance in Memphis.
67 posted on 07/18/2003 6:20:33 PM PDT by AntiGuv (If at first you don't succeed, don't try skydiving!!)
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To: virgil
Dr. Wiley's death was never conclusively resolved. The police authorities stated he may've had a dizzy spell and fallen into the Mississippi River after stopping his car on the bridge to sightsee, or whatever...
68 posted on 07/18/2003 6:22:27 PM PDT by AntiGuv (If at first you don't succeed, don't try skydiving!!)
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To: livius
A police source ruled out hanging, an overdose, a gunshot wound or natural causes in his death.

He either stabbed or bludgeoned himself to death or (better yet) threw himself upon the ground with such force that he...

69 posted on 07/18/2003 6:23:47 PM PDT by Rudder
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To: virgil
It's also worth noting that the pathologist who performed the autopsy on Dr. Pasechnik and ruled his death a stroke evidently worked for Britain's MI5 intelligence agency.
70 posted on 07/18/2003 6:24:53 PM PDT by AntiGuv (If at first you don't succeed, don't try skydiving!!)
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To: Alamo-Girl; Fred Mertz; editor-surveyor
FYI............Anthrax......(children's medicine researchers)........'ping'.

Your# 67..........

Vladimir Pasechnik was ruled a stroke, five days after Don C. Wiley's disappearance in Memphis.

71 posted on 07/18/2003 6:25:21 PM PDT by maestro
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To: Shermy
I think you're correct. You've certainly made this seem less confusing to me. Kelly's testimony at the committee hearing on 7/15 was quite vague and seemed to be evasive comparable to "what the meaning of is is."
72 posted on 07/18/2003 6:26:32 PM PDT by arasina (Conservatives, be CONFIDENT! [My new fightin' words!] WE WILL PREVAIL!)
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To: livius
A police source ruled out hanging, an overdose, a gunshot wound or natural causes in his death. Well, exactly what does this leave? Did he vaporise?

Hari Kari

73 posted on 07/18/2003 6:28:34 PM PDT by leadhead
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To: AntiGuv
I skimmed through the SDI article. They seem to want to say it was a cover-up for defense contract fraud. I heard also that the Soviets were really worried about SDI and didn't want to see it go through. At Reykavik Gorbachev strung Reagan along for the whole conference agreeing to everything on disarmament, until the last thing, which was SDI. Reagan wouldn't abandon SDI then the whole deal fell in. Reagan was pissed.
74 posted on 07/18/2003 6:28:44 PM PDT by virgil
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To: wingnuts'nbolts; Henk; archy
Since he's a microbiologist "Memphicide" might be appropriate too.

Sure a strange story, whatever happened.

75 posted on 07/18/2003 6:40:13 PM PDT by Shermy
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To: virgil
He was a scientist who specialized in exotic bioweapons.

Probably used a sophisticated but quick and painless means to end his life at a favorite scenic spot.

Suicides are rarely a sudden event. He's probably been borderline for many years or decades. This recent event tipped him over. Or he may have already had a diagnosis of fatal or debilitating illness. Or such a morbid fear of losing his mental prowess as old age came upon him that, after fumbling in front of the committee, he decided to end it before he faced further mental aging.

These scientists take their brains and knowledge seriously. Very very seriously. It is key to their identity, their ego, their entire self-esteem.

Or maybe, being a funloving guy, he just dropped too many tabs of LSD and smoked too much crack last night. Who knows.
76 posted on 07/18/2003 6:45:07 PM PDT by George W. Bush
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To: Shermy
"A police source ruled out hanging, an overdose, a gunshot wound or natural causes in his death."

So how, exactly did he kill himself? Is this little fact in this piece somewhere, because if it is I missed it. I mean, did he cut his throat, slit his wrists, or beat himself about the head with a large rock?

I swear, this is the strangest story, it asserts he commited suicide (Tom Lantos voice please, all), doesn't say how, and then lists a bunch of causes of death that have been ruled out.

Maybe the darn BBC did kill him, and their Times cronies are just covering up for them.


77 posted on 07/18/2003 6:46:41 PM PDT by jocon307
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To: Mike4Freedom
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.

What nonsense. Blair is not cut from the same cloth as clinton in that way.

It certainly is not to Blair's benefit that Kelly turned up dead.

I, as some others have stated, doubted suicide, as I posted on another thread, by the description of him being "upset" that his words were taken by a journalist and misquoted. Then as I wrote my post I fleshed it out that perhaps he had NOT been misquoted and he was a party to and gotten caught undermining and lying about Blair, intelligence, his country, the war effort. That might even have been a crime. Hence, the suicide theory seemed much more likely.

Too soon to say until more details are learned.

78 posted on 07/18/2003 6:56:06 PM PDT by cyncooper (it is my current intention to vote for George W. Bush for reelection...Ed Koch,7/16/03)
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To: Spunky
I am happy to see I am not the only one confused about this.

and it is the conservatives that are attacking Blair

79 posted on 07/18/2003 6:56:42 PM PDT by alrea
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To: jocon307
So how, exactly did he kill himself? Is this little fact in this piece somewhere, because if it is I missed it. I mean, did he cut his throat, slit his wrists, or beat himself about the head with a large rock?

I thought of knife or suffocation, since so many other ways to die are said not to be the means, and to rule out natural causes means the cause must be kind of obvious. The article rules out hanging, but maybe a plastic bag over the head?

80 posted on 07/18/2003 7:00:53 PM PDT by cyncooper (it is my current intention to vote for George W. Bush for reelection...Ed Koch,7/16/03)
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