Urban75 Home About Offline BrixtonBuzz Contact

Paramedics doubt Dr Kelly's 'suicide' cause

Buddy Bradley said:
They suggest that he didn't commit suicide. Do pay attention.

Most people, but, more importantly, all of the family, do not agree with you. Pay that some attention.
 
Buddy Bradley said:
They suggest that he didn't commit suicide. Do pay attention.
So if he didn't commit suicide, what do you think really happened?

And why doesn't the family share the view that it wasn't suicide?
Any ideas?
 
There are contradictions in that report but, nothing to suggest murder.

Special Branch had been introduced to the investigation early on because of Dr Kelly's status and particular importance at the time.

Taking into account human error (aberrations of memory and powers of observation and description) and, considering we were a country at war by the time of the enquiry (certain information will not have been made public under any circumstances), I can't see anything to suggest murder. It all looks like suicide still to me.

I'm really not sure about DC Coe. Perhaps he is just stupid. I've met lots of incredibly dense, ignorant and self-important DC's :D No idea how they get the job. Or, maybe he thought he was doing the right thing by not disclosing the identity of mystery man to the point of denying he ever existed. Like I say, very sensitive times during war. I'd like to think top secret stuff is kept top secret for good reason. It would be foolish to write off the possibility of murder by Iraqi forces at the start of the investigation.

The only possible reason I can think of for a government agent killing him is that, in theory at least, he could be a key witness in a war trial and he had already spoken out against the government. However, it's the winners that write the history books and rightly or, wrongly Blair and Bush along with all their cronies are extremely unlikley to ever face trial. And, even if they did, there would be a number of other key witnesses they'd have to knock-off.

Absolutely nothing to gain or, lose. Just a very sad suicide.
 
editor said:
Any ideas?
Yes thanks, but I don't think I'll share them with you - you might start flinging around random nouns with '-tastic' added to the end, as if that somehow elevates the put-down to olympian levels...
 
Buddy Bradley said:
Yes thanks, but I don't think I'll share them with you - you might start flinging around random nouns with '-tastic' added to the end, as if that somehow elevates the put-down to olympian levels...
Why not offer an opinion as to why the family are satisfied with the verdict that their husband/father/relative took his own life?
 
Stobart Stopper said:
They have probably been told to keep their gobs shut. Or paid lots of money to do just that.
Seeing as there is not even the slightest molecule of proof to support any claim that the family have been 'paid off' in any way, I'd wager that some may find your claim just a teensy weensy bit fucking insulting.
 
Look, before you go off swearing at me and getting your y-fronts in a twist, why don't you borrow the book that I have lent to Mrs Magpie? I think she's finished with it. Nothing surprises me any more with this government, or the Americans, or any other for that matter. Read this book and then you might have a better understanding of how these people operate.

But you won't read it because you want believe everything you are told by the anti-conspiracy brigade.
 
The only thing 9/11 threads ever 'highlighted', as does this one, is your own lack of intellectual integrity and inability to debate in anything remotely resembling a 'logical' or 'adult' fashion.

editor said:
Imagine! Minor discrepencies in eye witness reports!

Who'd ever heard of such a thing!

That must surely prove beyond all doubt that Kelly's death was murder most foul because eye witnesses never, ever get confused, forget minor details or miss out things, do they?

:rolleyes:

Some inappropriately punctuated poncy rhetorical questions and a theatrical repetition of your own conjecture which you again pretend is my speculation, crowned with yet another half-witted attempt at a rhetorical question (Hey! You got the punctuation right!) and I can almost see a response!

So shall I paraphrase your shrieking into something intelligable for you? OK...

You suggest that a Detective Constable - trained to make accurate observations - 'got confused' about how many colleagues he had been wandering around the woods with, or 'forgot' his third un-named accomplis, and that this is 'a minor detail' presumably of no consequence, hence can be safely ignored.

That line of reasoning bears a striking resemblence to the official line.

Have I misrepresented your position here?
 
Stobart Stopper said:
Look, before you go off swearing at me and getting your y-fronts in a twist, why don't you borrow the book that I have lent to Mrs Magpie? I think she's finished with it.

What's this book called?
 
Stobart Stopper said:
Look, before you go off swearing at me and getting your y-fronts in a twist, why don't you borrow the book that I have lent to Mrs Magpie? I think she's finished with it. Nothing surprises me any more with this government, or the Americans, or any other for that matter. Read this book and then you might have a better understanding of how these people operate.

But you won't read it because you want believe everything you are told by the anti-conspiracy brigade.


This book casts doubt on Janice Kelly's integrity and dignity, does it?

Sorry, but editor is spot on. The suggestion that Mrs Kelly was "paid off" to remain silent on the causes of her husband's death is insulting, pathetic and unsupported by the evidence.

"My husband was let down and betrayed by the MOD"
 
rasputin said:
Sorry, but editor is spot on. The suggestion that Mrs Kelly was "paid off" to remain silent on the causes of her husband's death is insulting, pathetic and unsupported by the evidence.

"My husband was let down and betrayed by the MOD"
From that article:

Mrs Kelly, speaking publicly about her husband's death for the first time, said her husband had been "tired, subdued, but not depressed" on 17 July - the day he went missing.

He had got on with work compiling the list of his media contacts demanded by MPs, but later that morning, she was physically sick "because he looked so desperate".

"I just thought he had a broken heart. He had shrunk into himself but I had no idea of what he might do later."

At this stage, Dr Kelly could not talk at all, she said, and at 1500 BST went for the walk which ended with his death.

The knife found beside Dr Kelly's body had been one the family recognised as his from his childhood - probably from the Boy Scouts, she said
Does that sound like someone drawn to the absolute brink?

It sure does to me.
 
rasputin said:
This book casts doubt on Janice Kelly's integrity and dignity, does it?

Sorry, but editor is spot on. The suggestion that Mrs Kelly was "paid off" to remain silent on the causes of her husband's death is insulting, pathetic and unsupported by the evidence.

"My husband was let down and betrayed by the MOD"

Perhaps Stobart Stopper thinks Mrs Kelly was only paid enough to stop her saying it was murder, but that the government saved itself some money by not paying her to stop her criticism of the MOD. :rolleyes:
 
Backatcha Bandit said:
The only thing 9/11 threads ever 'highlighted', as does this one, is your own lack of intellectual integrity and inability to debate in anything remotely resembling a 'logical' or 'adult' fashion.
Christ, your pomposity is tiresome.

I've been in a court case where the two arresting officers couldn't get their facts straight. It's hardly fucking unusual.
 
Counties police officers are notoriously, er, what's the word, laid back when it comes to their efficiency. There's no doubt about that. They just dont deal with the volume of crime that Met officers deal with and sometimes this makes them a little less on the ball when it comes to collating and giving evidence.
 
editor said:
some may find your claim just a teensy weensy bit fucking insulting.

Lets just nip this particularly *creepy* line of argument in the bud right here.

This is a favourite little tricky trick you try to pull on just about every thread where your feeble debating skills are laid so bare.

First, you invite SS to speculate regarding the family, then you seek to imply that by questioning the 'official version' of what the family have to say - and remember, their evidence was never released - her response is somehow 'morally insulting' to the family and that to discuss them is some sort of an affront to common decency, that it is a taboo subject for fear of upsetting or 'insulting' them.

How low can you get. Putrid emotional appeals to 'common decency'. Another weapon in your arsenal of logial fallacy. Ugh.
 
editor said:
I've been in a court case where the two arresting officers couldn't get their facts straight. It's hardly fucking unusual.
It's not just a case of him not remembering, but of him being in the woods where the body was found instead of in the village where he was supposed to be:
23 Q. When you got to the police station, what were you asked
24 to do?
25 A. Go and make some house to house inquiries in the area
(From DC Coe's testimony)

18 Q. You mentioned DC Coe. Was he part of your search team?
19 A. No.
20 Q. What he was he doing?
21 A. He was at the scene. I had no idea what he was doing
22 there or why he was there
. He was just at the scene
23 when PC Sawyer and I arrived.
(From PC Franklin's testimony)
 
Backatcha Bandit said:
First, you invite SS to speculate regarding the family, then you seek to imply that by questioning the 'official version' of what the family have to say - and remember, their evidence was never released - her response is somehow 'morally insulting' to the family and that to discuss them is some sort of an affront to common decency, that it is a taboo subject for fear of upsetting or 'insulting' them.
So do you think it's even remotely likely that the family were "paid off" then?

I'm not ashamed to say I find the suggestion leaves a very bad taste in the mouth, but I guess those desperate to find a conspiracy have no qualms about plumbing the moral depths.
 
editor said:
I'm sorry, but I'm having trouble believing that 5 pints of blood would completely cover a normal sized house (not that I'm sure what the point is seeing as most of Kelly's blood would have escaped into the porous earth).

Have you a source for this claim please?


I suggest reading some books on forensics. A small amount of blood can cover a very large area. This is why it is damn near impossible to clean up after a violent crime. Blood can be detected many years in some cases decades at a crime scene no matter how much effort is taken to clean up.
 
editor said:
I'm not ashamed to say I find the suggestion leaves a very bad taste in the mouth, but I guess those desperate to find a conspiracy have no qualms about plumbing the moral depths.
I guess you must regard the ambulance crew with the greatest distaste, as their public dismissal of the death by slashed-wrist theory has reignited the issue?

I'm suprised you aren't writing to the Sun or Daily Telegraph! Or maybe you have.
 
tobyjug said:
I suggest reading some books on forensics. A small amount of blood can cover a very large area. This is why it is damn near impossible to clean up after a violent crime. Blood can be detected many years in some cases decades at a crime scene no matter how much effort is taken to clean up.
oh no tobyjug!

In editor's world, blood will leave no trace whatsoever when it seeps into the ground or dries up. The grass will stay green! The firm assessments of those who have seen cases of arterial bleeding is to be ignored (when it suits).
 
editor said:
So do you think it's even remotely likely that the family were "paid off" then?
How about this, then - a family deep in the grip of grief and despair were given an entirely plausible reason for their relative killing himself by an agency that many could not believe of ever telling porkies, and they believed it?

I agree, the suggestion that she was "paid off" is ludicrous - it would be much easier (and cheaper) to simply give her an alternative, believable, version of events which fits the facts.

Note - "fitting the facts" is not synonymous with "the truth".
 
Backatcha Bandit said:
Some inappropriately punctuated poncy rhetorical questions and a theatrical repetition of your own conjecture which you again pretend is my speculation, crowned with yet another half-witted attempt at a rhetorical question (Hey! You got the punctuation right!) and I can almost see a response!

So shall I paraphrase your shrieking into something intelligable for you? OK...

You suggest that a Detective Constable - trained to make accurate observations - 'got confused' about how many colleagues he had been wandering around the woods with, or 'forgot' his third un-named accomplis, and that this is 'a minor detail' presumably of no consequence, hence can be safely ignored.
If you're going to criticise Mike's punctuation, at least try and spell your own posts properly... :rolleyes:
 
Perfectly understandable that such a policeman might find himself wandering around the woods, just happen to be one of the first on the scene of a grisly national news event (coincidence of course), and completely forget what he doing or who he was with. Nothing to worry about. Move along now... look, Blanket's resigned!
 
editor said:
I'm not ashamed to say I find the suggestion leaves a very bad taste in the mouth, but I guess those desperate to find a conspiracy have no qualms about plumbing the moral depths.

DrJazzz said:
I guess you must regard the ambulance crew with the greatest distaste, as their public dismissal of the death by slashed-wrist theory has reignited the issue?

Dr Jazz, please read the thread. The "suggestion" to which editor refers is that the family were "paid off" to remain silent about the possibility that Dr Kelly was murdered.

This implies that:

1. Somebody made the offer
2. The family accepted it.

The first is possible but unlikely in my view; the second, as I have already said, is deeply insulting to the family and makes no sense in the context of the inquest testimony provided by Dr Kelly's widow.
 
DrJazzz said:
Perfectly understandable that such a policeman might find himself wandering around the woods, just happen to be one of the first on the scene of a grisly national news event (coincidence of course), and completely forget what he doing or who he was with. Nothing to worry about. Move along now... look, Blanket's resigned!
Are you seriously suggesting that he resigned in order to divert attention away from this thread?
 
rasputin said:
Dr Jazz, please read the thread. The "suggestion" to which editor refers is that the family were "paid off" to remain silent about the possibility that Dr Kelly was murdered.
I think if you re-read a little more carefully, DrJazzz was referring to the latter half of editor's post ("those desperate to find a conspiracy have no qualms about plumbing the moral depths"), and noting that it could equally well apply to the paramedics in question.
 
Back
Top Bottom