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Re: Published medical doubts on David Kelly 'suicide'



"Paul Nutteing"
9/28/2004 6:37:31 PM


Continuation of Kelly murder and cover-up
http://www.guardian.co.uk/letters/story/0,,1314098,00.html
Quote
Letters
New doubts over Kelly
Tuesday September 28, 2004
The Guardian
At the Hutton inquiry, the forensic pathologist Dr Nicholas Hunt stated that
in his view Dr David Kelly took his own life by cutting his left wrist and
taking an overdose of painkillers. But in January, Dr Hunt's primary cause
of death - haemorrhage from a cut wrist - was taken apart by surgeons and
other medical professionals who asserted it was "highly improbable" that Dr
Kelly would have lost more than one pint of blood from transection of a
single ulnar artery in a single wrist.
Now, in last week's British Medical Journal, eminent forensic experts have
remarked that the level of Coproxamol in Dr Kelly's blood should not have
been taken as an accurate indicator of the amount he allegedly ingested,
because drug concentrations can increase markedly after death (Doctors raise
doubts over suicide verdicts, Guardian, September 17).
Although the remarks of the forensic toxicologist Professor Robert Forrest
and colleagues in the BMJ do not necessarily indicate that Dr Kelly's death
was murder, they do however reveal that concentrations of a drug in the
blood can increase as much as tenfold after death. Alexander Allan,
toxicologist at the Hutton inquiry, has already conceded that Dr Kelly's
blood contained only about a third of what is normally a fatal level, so it
is possible that Dr Kelly had ingested not a third but a thirtieth of the
amount needed to kill him.
As the death scene on Harrowdon Hill had all the trappings of a suicide that
is highly unlikely to have succeeded, this might indicate Dr Kelly was
assassinated, and the scene then set to create the appearance of suicide. If
he did not die by any of the means offered to date, this would suggest that
he was killed by an as yet undiscovered agent. The Hutton inquiry, with its
inability to subpoena witnesses or hear evidence on oath, proved a poor
substitute for a coroner's full investigation. With the Hutton suicide
ruling now called into serious question by experts from across the medical
spectrum, there must now be a cast-iron case for resuming a full inquest
into Dr Kelly's death.
C Stephen Frost
Specialist in diagnostic radiology
David Halpin
Specialist in trauma and orthopaedic surgery
William McQuillan
Specialist in trauma and orthopaedic surgery
Searle Sennett
Specialist in anaesthesiology
End Quote
What they aren't telling you about DNA profiles
and what Special Branch don't want you to know.
http://www.nutteing2.freeservers.com/dnapr.htm
or nutteingd in a search engine
Valid email nutteing@fastmail.....fm (remove 4 of the 5 dots)
Ignore any other apparent em address used to post this message -
it is defunct due to spam.
 
 
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