MI6 did not tell police of probe into spy in bag’s memory sticks

Security service searched spy's 'electronic media' without telling police, inquest hears
Mysterious death: on CCTV, one of the last sightings of spy Gareth Williams
Paul Cheston1 May 2012
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MI6 examined memory sticks owned by “body in the bag” spy Gareth Williams without telling the police, the inquest heard today.

The intelligence service did not even inform the officer in charge of the case that the memory sticks existed until today — 20 months after the death. In a dramatic move as the inquest was about to conclude, the coroner ordered MI6 to send another senior officer to court to be questioned.

A witness, known as SIS D, was summoned to give evidence anonymously. He will be the fourth witness from the intelligence service granted such

protection on the grounds of national security.

Westminster coroner Fiona Wilcox also revealed that she had only just been informed that a second North Face sports holdall had also been found in Mr Williams’s office in MI6 headquarters at Vauxhall Cross.

Even though the bag was similar to the one his body was found inside, it was not seized by police and no inventory taken of its contents.

MI6 made its own inventory of Mr Williams’s belongings in his office but did not pass it to the police until yesterday.

Mobile phones and laptops found in the code breaker’s Pimlico flat were taken by the police. But they were unaware of the existence of “nine assorted memory sticks” in his locker at MI6.

Detective Chief Inspector Jackie Sebire, the senior investigating officer, told the court that she had been unaware that any of Mr Williams’s electronic media had been examined before it was passed to the police.

“I was not surprised that memory sticks were found but I would have expected the relevant information to be sent to our team,” she said. She agreed that she should have been informed about the memory sticks back in August 2010 when Mr Williams died.

Dc Colin Hall told the court he had been taken to Mr Williams’s office by his Superintendent Michael Broster, and two MI6 officers. He said that it was Mr Broster who told him not to take the bag found under Mr Williams’s desk but to search it and then leave it.

Dc Hall told the court that it contained personal and “sensitive” items.

The inquest continues.

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