Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

A very good analysis, one of the best so far. After reading the article i am sure their will be no outcome from this investigation. Tain Tain Fish …
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Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard**
By Fred Burton and Scott Stewart

The Pakistani government is committed to finding and bringing to justice those responsible for the assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, a spokesman for President Pervez Musharraf told the media Jan. 8. The spokesman also said he hopes Scotland Yard’s technological expertise will help Pakistani investigators solve the case.

A team of five investigators from London’s Metropolitan Police – Scotland Yard – arrived in Pakistan on Jan. 4, more than a week after the Dec. 27 assassination. The British have some of the best investigators, forensic technicians and laboratories in the world. Moreover, after decades of investigating Irish Republican Army attacks and, more recently, attacks by jihadist operatives in London, they not only are extremely proficient, but highly experienced. However, the investigators sent to Pakistan face a daunting task.

The Investigation

Following an attack such as the Bhutto assassination, the crime scene investigation would need to proceed in two fronts, one focusing on the shooting and the other on the bombing.

The shooting investigation would be concerned with determining the number of shots fired and from where they came. The investigators also would conduct a forensic examination of the evidence to match any recovered slugs and shell casings to any recovered weapons. The recovered weapons and shell casings would be examined for latent fingerprints in an effort to determine who handled them.

Even in the best of times and in a location where the crime scene is able to be secured and carefully preserved for investigators, bullets can pass through a victim and never be recovered, or they can deform or fragment – making a forensic comparison difficult. It also can be very difficult to recover identifiable latent fingerprints from a weapon after it has been handled by police or other first responders at the crime scene. This difficulty will be magnified in the Bhutto case because the prints could have been smudged or obliterated as a result of the subsequent bombing, or the gun could have been touched by others during the ensuing chaos. To complicate matters even further, the crime scene was quickly cleaned up and hosed down after the attack, which might have washed away valuable evidence such as bullet fragments and shell casings.

In Pakistan, particularly in the town of Darra Adamkhel near Peshawar, there are many skilled artisans who specialize in making guns from scratch, and some of their products are of high quality. Because of this cottage gun industry, the country is literally awash in weapons that cannot be tracked to a specific maker or by serial number to a specific gun dealer or owner. This means the manufacturer of the gun involved in the Bhutto assassination might never be identified. Moreover, even if the maker were found, the lack of firearms sales records would prevent him from identifying the owner, even if he were willing to do so. Additionally, the gun could have changed hands several times since it was first acquired.

As for the bombing crime scene, the investigators would want to recover pieces of the improvised explosive device (IED) in hopes of determining the components used and the construction technique. This combination of components and construction technique, often referred to as the bombmaker’s “signature,” would then be compared to devices used in other attacks or unexploded IEDs that had been recovered in an effort to determine who made the device. (It most likely was not constructed by the bomber himself).

Although it is hard to believe, most components of an IED survive the detonation rather than simply vaporizing. They might be shattered – and scattered – but quite often things such as batteries, switches and even pieces of the timer, tape and wires can be recovered after an explosion. One very good place to find such evidence is in the bodies of those killed, as the force of the blast can hurl small pieces of the device into the victims. Although it is a morbid process, X-ray examinations of the victims can result in the recovery of important evidence. In countries with few refrigerated morgues, or where religious customs call for a speedy burial, victims often are interred without having been X-rayed.

Another obstacle for investigators is the difficulty of identifying a suicide bomber after the explosion, especially one who was not carrying identification or was carrying false identification, something that is easy to procure in Pakistan. However, two factors could aid the investigators in this case. First, Pakistan requires fingerprints for its national ID cards. Second, the bomber’s hands might have survived the blast. It is possible, then, that the bomber’s fingerprints can be compared to the fingerprints of potential suspects.

Even if that were the case, though, another problem arises. There is a phenomenon in explosions in which body extremities are ripped from the torso of those in close proximity to the blast. This phenomenon, called sudden traumatic amputation, is the reason the heads of suicide bombers frequently are recovered in good shape. Because of this effect, it is not uncommon to find dismembered hands and especially feet at a bombing scene. However, it often is difficult to connect these hands and feet to specific bodies, so even if the bomber’s hands survived the blast, they could have been buried with someone else’s body.

Much has been made in the media about the failure of the Pakistani government to preserve the crime scene. In our experience, however, the condition of the crime scene in the Bhutto case is not unique, nor is it an indication in and of itself of a cover-up attempt. Such crime scene contamination routinely occurs – especially in the Third World. In many cases, crucial evidence walks off on the soles of people’s shoes, is washed away with hoses and street sweepers or is collected and thrown away. In addition to clean-up efforts at the scene, time also works against investigators because weather and vehicle and pedestrian contact can all work to eliminate trace evidence such as explosive residue. Because of these factors, by the time a Western forensic team can get to a place such as Pakistan, much of the crucial evidence might have disappeared.

There are cases, however, in which forensic teams have been creative or have caught lucky breaks. For example, the American team that went to Buenos Aires in 1992 to assist the Argentine government in the investigation of the Israeli Embassy bombing there found that the crime scene had been completed cleaned up and hosed down, as was the Bhutto crime scene in Pakistan. However, the investigators discovered a bomb fragment that had penetrated a hollow light pole, and thus had been preserved. From that piece they were able to recover explosive residue that allowed them to identify the type of explosives used in the bomb.

The armored vehicle in which Bhutto was traveling was heavily hit by shrapnel from the IED. A careful examination of the vehicle will likely yield bomb fragments covered in explosive residue, which could allow forensic chemists to identify the explosive used in the device. The vehicle also could have been struck by one or more of the shots fired at Bhutto, and thus could also yield some useful ballistic evidence. In the end, the vehicle could prove to be the most valuable source of evidence for the forensic team.

The Major Obstacles

The biggest obstacles facing the Scotland Yard investigators in this case are not the shape and age of the crime scene, but the uncertainty over the exact cause of death and the fact that Bhutto was buried without an autopsy having been performed. The autopsy not only would have determined what killed her, but perhaps also would have resulted in the recovery of the bullet that struck her – if indeed it was a bullet that caused her head wound and killed her. It is unlikely that Bhutto’s body will be exhumed for an autopsy. From a forensic standpoint, the Scotland Yard team could be able to tie the shell casings recovered at the scene to the gun used by the shooter – assuming the gun is ever recovered. However, since no bullet was recovered from Bhutto’s body, it will be impossible to verify precisely which gun was used.

Without accurate documentation of the wound, it might also be difficult to determine the angle from which the gun was fired, meaning where the shooter was in relation to Bhutto. This will greatly add to the ambiguity surrounding this case, and could very well prevent the team from reaching any firm conclusions. Regardless of Scotland Yard’s proficiency, experience and technical capabilities, the investigators simply cannot analyze evidence they do not have. Given the missing pieces, they will have to be extremely creative – and perhaps a bit lucky – to find evidence that will allow them to reach a conclusive determination.

However, given the historical context of political assassination in Pakistan – some investigated by Scotland Yard – it will come as no surprise if the investigation turns up little. In 1951, Scotland Yard was summoned to help in the investigation into the death of Pakistan’s first prime minister, Liaquat Ali Khan, who was shot in the park that now bears his name, Liaquat Bagh Park. (This, incidentally, is where Bhutto attended a political rally just minutes before her death). Then, in 1996, Scotland Yard was again asked to provide investigatory assistance in the assassination of Bhutto’s brother and political rival, Murtaza Bhutto. In both cases, the investigations were inconclusive – as was the American-led investigation into the death of President Zia ul-Haq, who died in a mysterious plane crash that also killed U.S. Ambassador Arnold Raphel, U.S. Gen. Herbert Wassom and several Pakistani generals. Incidentally, Zia was buried without an autopsy.

Thick clouds of doubt have surrounded these past assassinations – doubts that have lingered despite the involvement of outside investigators. The Bhutto case will likely turn out to be similarly shrouded in ambiguity.

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

Bah

After reading the article!

The whole Pakistan knows without reading this article that nothing will come up from this investigation.

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

I dont think it matters if she was killed by a gun or by the bomb. why does it matter?

The only question thats important is who killed her?

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

The evidence was literally washed away, and the doctors were pressured to 'alter' their story. Do we really expect anything??

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

Will a UN investigation magically change the facts?

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

It will FIND the facts.

No body knows the facts till now.

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

^^ how ?

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

Link please otherwise close this thread.

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

Receive it from :Strategic Forecasting, Inc.
Date: Wed, 9 Jan 2008 12:23:31 -0600
From: [email protected]

They didn’t send the link with it.

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

I was going to close this for being an non-linked article, but then on the stratfor website I found that this article is for subscribers only so a link, if presented, would be of no use.

The article suggests that the explosives should be traceable because the vehicle wasn't buried. That's a start.

As it points out, Islamic religious practices and protection of corpses from post-death mutilation such as autopsies tens to make it hard to recover evidence from the dead though.

I remember that when one of my grandfather's brothers died in hospital in the UK from a cause other than what he was admitted for, the hospital's rules meant that they had to perform an autopsy to check for malpractice. My family members fought tooth and nail to prevent the autopsy as they viewed it as a form of desecrating his corpse.

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

[quote]
The shooting investigation would be concerned with determining the number of shots fired and from where they came. The investigators also would conduct a forensic examination of the evidence to match any recovered slugs and shell casings to any recovered weapons. The recovered weapons and shell casings would be examined for latent fingerprints in an effort to determine who handled them.
[/quote]

Let me then just concentrate ont his very paragraph.
Can someone tell me how this is going to be conducted, since all evidence has been washed off the streets the very night of her assassination?!

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

According to the article, this won't be possible. But it also says that the shooting evidence is least likeely to be useful, because Pakistan's cottage industry for firearms produces completely untraceable weapons.

In most countries, the standards and laws on gun manufactuer make it easy to identy a gun by the characteristics it leaves on the bullet it fired. In Pakistan's unique cottage industry in gun production (which is where mos illegally held firearms in Pakistan are alleged to have come from), the lack of standards means that you can't tell from a bullet what gun fired it. The rifling pattern, for instance, is different in a home-made kalashnikov from each different cottage maker to what you find in an officially licenced Ak-47.

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

Frankly despite the popular view among Pakis, i do not beleive that government had a hand in assassination of Bhutto. The shooting, the bomb going on and then some third person shooting from somewhere else. I doubt our Paki brothers can pull off such a job.

But i am amazed at how good our people are at messing the things up. How the hell did they come up with lever theory and then retracted it. Then our President had to say that the wound on BB's head could have been by a bullet, when the description in the report does not match a bullet wound by any stretch of imagination.

Why do they need to make such statements instead of just shutting up.

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

So case Is closed before It ever was opened. But this is something which should worry the government after all. How can such uncharacteristic weapons been produced? Whatever the case Is, I also believe that there would have been no result no matter which bullet had hit BB on her head/neck.

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

Icono, dont underestimate the ISI. They have implanted 3 Generals cleverly into Paks history. The 4th is still on his kursi enjoying daaru and mujras. So military has ruled Pak from day one thanks to Ayyub Saheb. They can rule another 100 years if needed.

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

I am sure an Autopsy will clear everything, including whether BB was shot in the abdoman, as stated by Farooq Naik (BB's lawyer and senior PPP official).

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

But why hasn't the Govt. come to explain why the 'Scene of Crime' was cleansed so quick?! Unless it was intended for no evidence to be found?

Please answer as clearly as the question is...don't go off topic, no off-tangent, no question for question type of answers.

Thank you!

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

I am still waiting for comments from those that denied it when I mentioned it :hehe:

something fishy fishy… govt washing evidence right after the assasination, docs changing statements (after phone calls), govt coming up with a hosh posh sun roof theory, new video coming out, govt caught with its pants down, backtracking, mushy admitting she was shot and evidence was washed, scotland yard called

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

Well i anticipate that soon a video will appear where the shooter or suicide bomber will declare that he is going to read his will and tell of his plans for assassination.

Re: Terrorism Weekly The Bhutto Assassination: A Tough Case for Scotland Yard

lol do you remember the intimate convo that the govt supposedly intercepted minutes after the assasination? I dont know but the govt needs to realize they should come up with better ways to coverup.