A British intelligence officer, who was found dead in his London apartment in 2010, was not a transvestite, as some media reports have speculated, but probably worked undercover dressed as a woman, according to a leading forensic investigator. Gareth Williams, a mathematician in the employment of Britain’s signals intelligence agency, GCHQ, had been seconded to MI6, Britain’s external intelligence agency, to help automate intelligence collection. He had also worked with several United States agencies, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the National Security Agency. But his career came to an abrupt end in August 2010, when he was found dead in a padlocked sports bag at his home in Pimlico, London.
The discovery of £15,000 ($20,000) worth
of women’s clothing in Williams’ apartment caused some in the British
media to speculate that sexual jealousy may have behind the spy’s death.
British tabloid The Sun suggested
at the time that Williams was “a secret transvestite who may have been
killed by a gay lover”. There were also reports that police
investigators themselves suspected that Williams’ death may have been
the result of “a sex game gone wrong”. This appeared to be substantiated
by the discovery that Williams had visited gay bars and drag nightclubs
in London in the weeks before his death. Subsequent reports,
however, suggested that law enforcement investigators described
Williams’ death as “a neat job”, a term used to refer to professional
killings. There have also been official denials by police that Williams’ murder was sex-related.
Now a leading forensic investigator has
said that Williams was not a transvestite and that he probably dressed
in women’s clothing for his job with MI6. Peter Faulding, who
specializes in deaths within confined spaces, and has advised British
and American law enforcement agencies, has previously spoken publicly
against the theory that Williams locked himself in the bag. He said he
tried without success to lock himself in the same type of bag 300 times
before discounting the self-lock theory. Faulding spoke again to The Sun
last week, this time to suggest that there is no evidence that the late
MI6 spy was a transvestite. “The key question never asked was: were
these clothes used for his job?” he said, referring to the feminine
attire found in Williams’ apartment. He told The Sun that the
clothes were “used for work, rather than pleasure”. “I am certain he
made a very convincing female”, said Faulding. “He was slim, with
feminine features, and as a cyclist he shaved his legs”.
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