Sunday, February 9, 2020

Suspect In Car Crash That Killed A Teenage Motorcyclist In The U.K. Last Year Was A Senior CIA Spy

Fugitive mother-of-three Anne Sacoolas - who is accused of killing Harry Dunn - was a CIA agent, The Mail on Sunday can reveal. Pictured: Mrs Sacoolas back home in Virginia last week, where she was pictured filling up her car

Daily Mail: Fugitive American wife Anne Sacoolas who is wanted over the death of Harry Dunn was a CIA spy and 'held a higher rank than her husband'

* Anne Sacoolas crashed into Harry Dunn's motorbike outside RAF Croughton
* British Ministers and officials are aware of Mrs Sacoolas’s career in espionage
* US government sources said Mrs Sacoolas was ‘not active’ while in the UK
* However, a security source told the Mail: ‘You never really leave the CIA'
* Harry’s mother Charlotte Charles said things are 'beginning to fall into place’

The American woman accused of killing Harry Dunn was a CIA agent, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.

Fugitive mother-of-three Anne Sacoolas, who fled Britain after crashing into the teenager’s motorbike outside an air base last August, is understood to have served as a senior spy.

British Ministers and officials are aware of Mrs Sacoolas’s career in espionage, but she was not declared as an agent when she came to the UK alongside her intelligence officer husband Jonathan.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: There is not much that the family of Harry Dunn can do. Anne Sacoolas may have once been a CIA officer, but she is the wife of an intelligence officer based at RAF Croughton in Northamptonshire, and when this terrible accident occurred she did have diplomatic immunity. Bottom line. The only way that Anne Sacoolas can go back to the U.K. is if the U.S. extradites her there, and for now the US is saying no. On another note. Who leaked the intel that she was a former senior CIA spy?

More News On Claims that Fugitive American Anne Sacoolas Wanted For The Death Of Harry Dunn Was A Senior CIA Officer

Harry Dunn's mother is 'livid' at claims Anne Sacoolas, a suspect in the car crash that killed the teenage motorcyclist, was a CIA spy -- Daily Mail
Harry Dunn's family seek answers over reports Anne Sacoolas was CIA officer -- The Guardian
Anne Sacoolas: Harry Dunn’s alleged killer a more senior spy than husband, report claims -- The Independent
How could they do this to us? – Dunn’s mother attacks Government after spy claim -- Yahoo News/PA Media
Harry Dunn death: Call for public inquiry after family 'abandoned' -- Sky News

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I do not see the point of wanting to put her in jail.


She drove on the wrong side of the road. If she was not DUI (alcohol, prescription or illegal drugs, sleep deprived), driving on the wrong side is very easy to do I would think.

How many weeks, months, or years had she driven in Britain? If she had driven a year had she come back from the states recently?

After the involvement of the British Secret Services in the 2016 election, I would not truest the Brits to interrogate one of our present or former spies. They could make a deal of 3 to 6 months jail time, then a parole and then a pardon, if she gave up some seemingless innocuous information.

If it is an old boys network (& Britain is the epitome of that) is anything Christopher Steele does off the radar for MI5 or MI6. Are they kept in the loop, tacitly approves, but have deniability?

Self driving cars would get rid of the 2 systems problem. With automation, you could switch to 1 system. Too many people hacking to really trust that.

I would like to know more of the details of the accident from an 'industrial safety'/psychological perspective. Something as simple as crossing the road and looking the right way is hard. You can be warned, make a mental note, cross the street properly for several days and then default to your country's system.

I see a problem, a tragedy but no intent or no crime.




bob said...

My wife and I moved to Ireland about a year ago from the states, more on that later. My father-in-law was stationed at this base back in the 60's, so my wife had always wanted to visit the area with her older brother. It so happened that he was in business in England last summer and we met him there for a weekend. We drove the same road where the accident had occurred only a few weeks earlier. We hadn't heard about it at the time, but I remember being concerned about the narrow and twisted features of the road. I can easily see a car/motorcycle accident happening in that area, especially with someone not completely comfortable driving on the left side of the road with three noisy kids in the back of the car. Also, from my limited experience of driving in Europe, motorcyclists tend to take more risks that normal drivers.

A tragedy? Yes. Criminal? probably not