belfasttelegraph | Why did Graham Coe, the detective who found Dr Kelly's body, not tell
Hutton that there was a third suited man with him and his partner DC
Colin Shields when the body was discovered, as some eyewitnesses had
suggested. Why has he subsequently admitted this? And why does he refuse
to name him?
How did Dr Kelly cut his left wrist if, as friends
said, he had damaged his right arm to such a degree that he struggled
cutting steak?
Why was the ulnar artery severed rather than the
radial, which is how the cut would "naturally" have been made, from left
to right, with the right hand? Could this suggest the cut was made by a
third person?
Why were there no fingerprints on the knife when Dr
Kelly was not wearing gloves? Nor on the bottle from which he
supposedly drank to swallow the tablets? Why was that fact not disclosed
to Hutton, but only later through a Freedom of Information request?
Why did the helicopter which passed over the scene with heat-seeking equipment not detect the body soon after death – a piece of information obtained using the Freedom of Information Act five years after the Hutton Inquiry ended?
What explains the discrepancy between the
account of the position of the body given by the dog handler who
discovered it and the paramedics when they arrived? Did someone move the
body? Did Dr Kelly die where his body was found?
Why did the head
of the investigation into Dr Kelly's death, Superintendent Alan Young
of Thames Valley Police, not give evidence to Hutton?
Did the police and three officers from MI5's Technical Assessment Unit strip the wallpaper at Dr Kelly's home in the hours after he was reported missing – but before his body was found? Had Dr Kelly written 40,000 words of a book on Iraq and biological warfare which they took away? Where are his computers now?
Why did Lord Hutton place a 70-year embargo on release of the post-mortem documents?
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