England - A city police chief who led an investigation into
charges that Britain cooperated with secret CIA flights to
transport terrorism suspects without formal proceedings has
been found dead, his deputy said Tuesday.
Manchester Chief Constable Michael Todd, 50, was found dead
in Snowdonia, about 240 miles northwest of London, Deputy
Chief Constable Dave Whatton said. He had been missing since
going out for a walk Monday during his day off.
Whatton said the body, which was found Tuesday afternoon,
had not yet been formally identified but he believed it was
Todd.
He said a coroner's inquest would investigate the cause of
death and did not give any further details.
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Todd was elected vice president of the Association of Chief
Police Officers of England and Wales in 2006, according to
a biography on his Web site.
The association gave him the task of looking into accusations
that Britain allowed the CIA to use the country's airports
to fly terrorism suspects to other countries without any extradition
hearings, a clandestine procedure known as "extraordinary
rendition."
Todd's investigation concluded last June that there was no
evidence to back the claim. Last month, however, Britain admitted
one of its remote outposts in the Indian Ocean had twice been
used by the United States as a refueling stop for the secret
transfer of two terrorism suspects.
He and his wife had a daughter and twin sons.