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ANKARA: Police Destroy File On Dink Murder Suspect

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  • ANKARA: Police Destroy File On Dink Murder Suspect

    POLICE DESTROY FILE ON DINK MURDER SUSPECT

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Oct 4 2007

    The police file on a prime suspect in the murder case of
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink has been destroyed on grounds
    that the file was a "state secret," the private NTV station reported
    on Wednesday.

    The Ýstanbul court, which is currently trying 19 suspects in the
    murder of Dink, who was shot outside his newspaper's office by an
    ultranationalist teenager in January of this year, had not demanded to
    see the police files on Erhan Tuncel, a former police informant facing
    trial for having incited the gunman to kill Dink. The court's request
    was turned down by the Intelligence Department, where Tuncel's file is
    stored, which said the document was destroyed to protect state secrets.

    The prosecutors carrying out the investigation had seen the police
    file on Tuncel, a former informant who worked for the Trabzon police.

    However, the file was apparently destroyed before the court had a
    chance to see the document. Erdal Doðan, a lawyer representing the
    Dink family, said this was a "legal scandal." The court denied Doðan's
    request for the file a second time, saying it was "confidential." Doðan
    said their demands would continue. "This secret cannot be hidden from
    the court even though it is a state secret.

    This is a violation of the Law of Procedures," he said.

    Prior to the second hearing of the trial, which was on Monday, tape
    recordings of a phone conversation between police officer Muhittin
    Zenit and Tuncel were leaked to the media. The conversation suggests
    that Zenit knew about the plot to murder Dink earlier. However, the
    request of Dink's family lawyers to start an investigation into police
    officer Zenit in Monday's hearing was overruled, the report said.

    The controversy over Tuncel's file is likely to deepen concerns over
    a possible cover-up by state authorities in the murder. Dink's lawyers
    have complained that the murder has not been properly investigated and
    have expressed fears for the independence of the court, reflecting
    concerns about the possible involvement of Turkey's so-called "deep
    state." The "deep state" is a term coined to describe hard-line
    nationalists in the bureaucracy and security forces who are prepared
    to subvert the law for their own political ends.

    There were also reports in the Turkish press suggesting that the
    teenager accused of killing Dink, identified as O.S., was probably
    attempting to mislead the judges in hopes of winning a reduction
    in his sentence when he told the court during Monday's hearing that
    he regretted his actions and claimed he had carried out the slaying
    under the influence of drugs.

    Blood tests taken immediately after his arrest less than 24 hours
    after the murder revealed that he had not taken drugs prior to the
    crime, the reports said.

    --Boundary_(ID_miopp/aQSWFVkLdF6fdtyQ)--
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