Bob Woolmer 'murder not proven'

Sultan

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Police investigating the death of Pakistan cricket coach Bob Woolmer have not proved he was murdered, a Pakistani detective attached to the case says.

Deputy police inspector general Mir Zubair Mehmood told the BBC that the probe had so far been inconclusive.

He was one of two Pakistani policemen sent to help police in the West Indies.

Mr Woolmer was found dead in his hotel in Jamaica after Pakistan's first-round exit from the cricket World Cup. Police there said he had been murdered.

I can say that at this point no one can say it was a murder

Deputy inspector general Mir Zubair Mehmood

The man leading the investigation into Mr Woolmer's death had earlier played down similar remarks Mr Mehmood was reported to have made to news agencies.

Jamaica's deputy police commissioner Mark Shields told the BBC that he had spoken to the Pakistani detective who denied that he had made any comments on the investigation.

Mr Shields said that Mr Mehmood had every confidence in the Jamaican police and he believed the two men had a good relationship.

Tests

Mr Mehmood said the investigation was confidential and to share it woulde be "unethical".

"But I can say that at this point no one can say it was a murder," he told the BBC.

He said the results of several tests sent to Scotland Yard were awaited: "The most I can say is that the investigation in Woolmer's case is inconclusive."

Mr Mehmood has led several high-profile investigations, including the inquiry into the murder of US journalist, Daniel Pearl.

Mr Woolmer, a former England cricketer, was found dead in his Jamaica hotel room on 18 March.

A post-mortem examination showed that he died of strangulation. Some reports said he was also incapacitated by some kind of poison before he was strangled.

Mr Woolmer's body was returned to South Africa late last month. He was cremated last Friday.

No-one has yet been arrested in connection with his death, which overshadowed the cricket World Cup.

Police are still working to identify those captured on security camera footage from the hotel where he died.

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Sultan

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Brit expert too says Woolmer not murdered
Published on: 5/15/07.


A senior British pathologist reviewing the Bob Woolmer case has now joined the group saying he "was not strangled", according to the influential Times of London newspaper yesterday.



But yet again the Jamaican police maintained that the Pakistan cricket coach was murdered, even after British authorities said he was not strangled but had died of a heart attack.

Dr Nat Carey examined reports from the post-mortem, photographs and other material, said the Times, and concluded that the death was not from asphyxiation due to manual strangulation. Carey was the pathologist who carried out the post mortems on the five prostitutes killed in a high-profile English case last year.

Britain's Scotland Yard's sources were quoted over the weekend as saying that Woolmer was not murdered, as previously announced by Deputy Commissioner Mark Shields of the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF).

Woolmer was found dead on March 18 in his suite at the Pegasus Hotel in New Kingston, the day after Pakistan crashed out of the World Cup.

The Jamaican police however said they would continue to treat the case as one of murder since the results of further tests were not yet available. Shields and another senior member of the force are in South Africa meeting with members of Woolmer's family.

"That will remain our position until the results of the investigation are known," said spokesman Karl Angel.

"The JCF is conducting an extensive and thoroughly professional investigation into the circumstances surrounding the death of Bob Woolmer . . . .

"This has included a request to the Commissioner of Police of the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) in London to conduct a review of the investigation. In addition, due to the open and transparent approach to the Woolmer investigation, the JCF has also welcomed assistance of the Pakistani authorities and Interpol."