F.B.I. to Help Investigate American’s Death in Singapore

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March 3, 2013
F.B.I. to Help Investigate American’s Death in Singapore, Reports Say
By DIDI KIRSTEN TATLOW

BEIJING — Amid growing global tensions over alleged extensive spying operations originating in China, often aimed at U.S. companies and organizations, Shane Todd’s death in Singapore last June is striking a nerve.

As a report by CNN makes clear, the parents of the 31-year-old American electrical engineer, Mary and Rick Todd, who live in Marion, Montana, believe many details about their son’s alleged suicide by hanging (he was found dead in his Singapore home on June 24) don’t match up. This Facebook page links to reports of the tragedy.

Now, after initially declining outside help into the investigation though Mr. Todd’s family requested it, the Singapore police have asked the F.B.I. for assistance, reports The Financial Times, citing an e-mail to the family and the U.S. Embassy in Singapore. Another report said the F.B.I. would comply.

Among the discrepancies alleged by the family: Mr. Todd’s mother doesn’t believe her son wrote a suicide note, one of several allegedly found in his home, since information in it was wrong, she said. The bathroom where Singaporean investigators said he died didn’t show the pulleys or holes in the wall they said were used in his suicide, the Todds said, after inspecting the site shortly after his death. A pathologist hired by the parents in the United States after their son’s body was flown back said it showed signs of struggle, and ruled the death a homicide. A computer expert they hired said someone looked at computer files he had downloaded, days after his death, and tried to delete one.

The real reason for his death? Their son may have known too much about a research project by the Institute of Microelectronics, a Singapore government research agency where he worked, and Huawei, the Chinese telecommunications giant, to co-develop a device powered by gallium nitride, they believe. Gallium nitride is a semiconductor material that can improve cellphone and radar technology and has uses in both civilian and military technology, according to scientists.

Such a project had been under discussion, The Financial Times reported. “Huawei has said it’s discussed a venture with IME but did not proceed with the project,” reported the FT, which last month published a detailed investigation of Mr. Todd’s death, titled “Death in Singapore.”

According to a petition on We the People, a whitehouse.gov petition site, that is calling for a Department of Justice investigation into Mr. Todd’s death, “Shane told his family his life was in jeopardy from foreign parties who had used his work on gallium nitride (GaN) amplifiers to compromise US national security and who might kill him to keep him from talking to US authorities.”

No one knows for sure yet what happened. In another report, Reuters wrote that “Interviews with the family, colleagues and friends revealed conflicting views on Todd’s state of mind before his death, the nature of his work and how he died.”

“Colleagues said that he was increasingly depressed in his last few months, but said that his concerns appeared to center on a sense of failure about his work, and an ambivalence about returning to the United States,” Reuters reported.

Aside from the tragedy of the loss of a son, there may be other issues at work here, the FT suggested.

The Todds “believe the loss of their son has national security implications and want it treated as such by Singapore and US authorities. They see Shane’s death as a warning to others – young, smart and ambitious – working in the global marketplace of commercial and defense research,” the newspaper wrote.
 
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March 1, 2013
FBI asked to help unravel Todd mystery

By Richard McGregor in Washington and Raymond Bonner in Los Angeles
Singapore skyline©AFP

Singapore police have asked the Federal Bureau of Investigation to assist in their probe into the death of Shane Todd, a young American engineer who died in contested circumstances last year.

In a letter received on Thursday by the FBI’s attache at the US embassy in the city state, Singapore police asked the US agency for help in “two specific areas” relating to Mr Todd’s death. The embassy informed the Todd family of the request in an e-mail on Friday, but did not detail what areas the police had requested help with.

The FBI and the Singapore police, which had previously resisted any outside participation in the probe, both declined to comment. An account of Todd’s death was published on February 16 in the Financial Times.

In a further development on Friday, the Todd family met senior FBI officials at the agency’s Washington headquarters and also a state department official.

The Todd family also separately met Frank Wolf, a Republican congressman from Virginia, and also Senator Max Baucus, a Montana Democrat who has raised the case with the White House.

Mr Todd headed a team at the Institute of Microelectronics (IME), a Singapore government research agency, that was working on the development of gallium nitride, a substance that has both commercial and military uses. Mr Todd was found hanged in his apartment in June, two days after leaving his job at IME. The Todd family has been pressing for further investigation into the death of their son, who had plans to return to the US.

The US embassy told the family, which had been lobbying for FBI involvement in the investigation, that the agency could only conduct an investigation in another country with permission from the relevant foreign government.

When the Todds met with Washington’s Singapore ambassador in December, he told them local police had rejected two FBI offers to assist in the case.

In January, the Singapore police asked the Todds to turn over an external computer hard drive they had found in their son’s apartment. The family said they would only do so if Singapore requested FBI assistance. The Singaporean government refused to do so at the time. The Todds declined to say on Friday if they will now turn over the hard drive.

According to a computer forensic expert who examined the hard drive for the Todds, someone accessed it three days after Shane’s death, looked at files related to his work at IME and tried to delete one of them.

The hard drive contained details of a research project by IME and Huawei, the Chinese telecommunications giant, to co-develop a device powered by gallium nitride.

Gallium nitride is a semiconductor material that can withstand extreme heat. Huawei has said its discussed a venture with IME but did not proceed with the project.
 
Since when is Singapore under US rule? FIB should just stay in USA.
 
Since when is Singapore under US rule? FIB should just stay in USA.

Invitation is to appease family of the deceased. End of the day, FBI will issue a statement that death was suicide. Embassy officials were satisfied much earlier that there was no foul play involved.
 
Invitation is to appease family of the deceased. End of the day, FBI will issue a statement that death was suicide. Embassy officials were satisfied much earlier that there was no foul play involved.

You sure no turnaround for political leverage?
 
There are numbers of answers that lie in the US and the local Police have no jurisdiction over there. The protocol is to request the agency in that country that has jurisdiction to assist. They certainly need to access his medical records as he was taking medication for depression. There is also the HD that has been mentioned plus the family pathologist findings. These are pretty routine all over the world. I am sure the US authorities know all this.

As the coroner inquiry gives ample opportunity to the family, their lawyers and their medical experts to quiz , it will interesting how this will pan out. I can sort of guess the pathologist will not come as the family will not pay the money. Don't be surprised if their lawyer also does not turn up. Only the embassy will be present for wayang.
 
Big deal... just another American death... the American era is over and the American life is worth only as much as the US dollar.
 
Don't expect the pappies to send in our poodles to investigate suspicious death of a sinkie in a foreign country. :oIo:
 
FBI is first world for all its problems. Poodle is 3rd world. Look at the standard of our armchair civil servant who claims to know about police and law stuff here and almost got sued. He learned from USA, UK and Israel too. So he is not first rated.
 
Since when is Singapore under US rule? FIB should just stay in USA.

What the fuck will it matter.

Singapore under Singaporean rule?

BALLS!!!

Singapore is under the dictatorship of the bastard chief parasite LKY added by his maggots in white.
Thereby becoming the most miserable country on this planet.

I rather go back to singing GOD SAVE THE QUEEN.

Or anything else

But Majullah Singapura which I take it as another bastard song same with the bastard pledge we were forced to say
The song and pledge perverted and bastardised by LKY
 
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