Gareth Williams: MI6 spy from Anglesey may have been poisoned says detective
Former Metropolitan Police murder squad detective Colin Sutton has shared his theory on the death of the Anglesey spy found dead in a holdall
By Rhodri Barker | June 23, 2014
A former senior murder squad detective claims an Anglesey spy whose body was found in a holdall may have been poisoned in a “perfect killing”.
The riddle of Gareth Williams’s death appeared resolved last year after a top-level police probe concluded that he probably died alone in an accident.
But former Metropolitan Police murder squad detective Colin Sutton has now challenged that view with a sensational new theory of his own.
Sutton, who was the most senior detective at the scene on the day of the gruesome discovery almost four years ago, revealed he has lingering doubts about the code-breaker’s death.
His view chimes with that of Westminster coroner Dr Fiona Wilcox, who recorded two years ago that Mr Williams was unlawfully killed. Her verdict was later overturned.
Police broke into Mr Williams’s flat in Pimlico in London in August 2010, and found his decomposing remains in a red bag padlocked from the outside.
Mr Sutton has now voiced fears that the flat may well have been "cleaned" of all incriminating traces while any poison in Mr Williams’s system may have been impossible to detect by then.
“The first thing that struck me was how hot it was. It was August yet the heating was on full blast,” he said, recalling arriving on the scene on the day of the discovery.
“It made me think immediately that the heating could have been left on to accelerate the decomposition of Gareth's body.
“If he had been poisoned then the chemical compounds might have vanished by the time toxicology tests were conducted.”
He added: "There is also the possibility that something very unusual and hard to detect was used to poison Gareth. It may seem far fetched but we know that Alexander Litvinenko was killed four years earlier in London with a rare radioactive isotope.
“I remain convinced the flat was tidied up after his death. That may have been to protect national security - or it might have been something more sinister. If that is the case, then it could have been the perfect murder."
Mr Williams, from Valley in Anglesey, was a maths PhD graduate who began working at GCHQ in Cheltenham in 2001.
Daily Post : Gareth Williams: MI6 spy from Anglesey may have been poisoned says detective
Monday, June 23, 2014
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Western Daily Press : Detective Colin Sutton thinks GCHQ worker Gareth Williams was drugged
Monday, June 23, 2014
Detective Colin Sutton thinks GCHQ worker Gareth Williams was drugged
By JEFF WELLS | June 23, 2014
GCHQ worker Gareth Williams could have been poisoned, a retired murder squad detective has said.
The MI6 codebreaker's body was found in a large hold-all in the bath of his flat in Alderney Street in Pimlico, London, in August, 2010.
The bag was locked, from the outside.
Former Detective Chief Inspector Colin Sutton was the most senior officer on the scene and he told The Sun newspaper that the flat was unusually warm when he arrived.
He claimed the heating was turned up to the maximum, possible to help with decomposition.
He said: "If he had been poisoned, then the chemical compounds might have vanished by the time toxicology results were conducted."
According to Mr Sutton if some unusual form of poison had been used it would have been difficult to detect. He added: "I remain convinced the flat was tidied up after his death. That may have been to protect national security or it might have been something more sinister. If that's the case, then it could have been the perfect murder."
Last year, the Metropolitan Police issued a report following further inquiries into Dr Williams' death which concluded that he was probably alone when he died.
Previously an inquest had decided that another person or persons were probably involved, as the mathematician was found locked, from the outside, in the bag.
Coroner Fiona Wilcox ruled that the spy would not have been able to lock himself in the bag and was therefore likely to have died at somebody else's hands.
She concluded: "The cause of his death was unnatural and likely to have been criminally mediated.
"I am therefore satisfied that on the balance of probabilities that Gareth was killed unlawfully."
Dr Williams was coming to the end of a three-year secondment to MI6 in London in August 2010, when he was reported missing by GCHQ, just days before he was due to return to Cheltenham.
Dr Williams, who rented a flat in Bouncers Lane, Cheltenham, for many years and was a keen cyclist and member of Cheltenham and County Cycle Club, was originally from North Wales.
His family have said they believed the coroner's view "accurately reflects the circumstances of Gareth's death.
"We remain very disappointed over the failure of his employers at MI6 to take even the most basic of enquiries concerning Gareth's welfare when he failed to attend for work on August 16, 2010," they said.
"This lack of concern for Gareth's wellbeing remains an overriding feature of our thoughts following the death of a dear son and brother."
By JEFF WELLS | June 23, 2014
GCHQ worker Gareth Williams could have been poisoned, a retired murder squad detective has said.
The MI6 codebreaker's body was found in a large hold-all in the bath of his flat in Alderney Street in Pimlico, London, in August, 2010.
The bag was locked, from the outside.
Former Detective Chief Inspector Colin Sutton was the most senior officer on the scene and he told The Sun newspaper that the flat was unusually warm when he arrived.
He claimed the heating was turned up to the maximum, possible to help with decomposition.
He said: "If he had been poisoned, then the chemical compounds might have vanished by the time toxicology results were conducted."
According to Mr Sutton if some unusual form of poison had been used it would have been difficult to detect. He added: "I remain convinced the flat was tidied up after his death. That may have been to protect national security or it might have been something more sinister. If that's the case, then it could have been the perfect murder."
Last year, the Metropolitan Police issued a report following further inquiries into Dr Williams' death which concluded that he was probably alone when he died.
Previously an inquest had decided that another person or persons were probably involved, as the mathematician was found locked, from the outside, in the bag.
Coroner Fiona Wilcox ruled that the spy would not have been able to lock himself in the bag and was therefore likely to have died at somebody else's hands.
She concluded: "The cause of his death was unnatural and likely to have been criminally mediated.
"I am therefore satisfied that on the balance of probabilities that Gareth was killed unlawfully."
Dr Williams was coming to the end of a three-year secondment to MI6 in London in August 2010, when he was reported missing by GCHQ, just days before he was due to return to Cheltenham.
Dr Williams, who rented a flat in Bouncers Lane, Cheltenham, for many years and was a keen cyclist and member of Cheltenham and County Cycle Club, was originally from North Wales.
His family have said they believed the coroner's view "accurately reflects the circumstances of Gareth's death.
"We remain very disappointed over the failure of his employers at MI6 to take even the most basic of enquiries concerning Gareth's welfare when he failed to attend for work on August 16, 2010," they said.
"This lack of concern for Gareth's wellbeing remains an overriding feature of our thoughts following the death of a dear son and brother."
Filed under
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by Winter Patriot
on Monday, June 23, 2014 |
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