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ANKARA: New Evidence In Dink Case Revealed Through Son Arat Dink's S

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  • ANKARA: New Evidence In Dink Case Revealed Through Son Arat Dink's S

    NEW EVIDENCE IN DINK CASE REVEALED THROUGH SON ARAT DINK'S SOFTWARE

    Today's Zaman
    Jan 12 2012
    Turkey

    The latest evidence submitted to the case investigating the murder
    of Hrant Dink, the late editor-in-chief of the Turkish-Armenian
    Agos weekly, was found through the efforts of the journalist's son,
    Arat Dink, who developed a software program that revealed misleading
    police information in the case.

    Dink was shot and killed by an ultranationalist teenager outside the
    offices of his newspaper in broad daylight in İstanbul on Jan. 19,
    2007. The investigation into his murder stalled when the suspected
    perpetrator and his accomplices were put on trial, but those who
    masterminded the plot to kill Dink have yet to be found and punished.

    Arat Dink, acting as a detective in his father's murder case, developed
    a software program to examine Telecommunications Directorate (TİB)
    phone records the Dink family attorneys were able to receive only a
    week ago. He was able to find five phone numbers that belong to people
    who were present at the crime scene on the day of the murder and who
    spoke with Mustafa Ozturk and Salih Hacısalihoglu, two suspects in
    the investigation.

    Fethiye Cetin, the Dink family's lawyer, also stated that, because of
    Arat Dink's software, they have been able to detect 14 other phone
    numbers belonging to people who were not present at the scene of
    the crime, but were called by two suspects who were present in the
    vicinity of the Agos office at the time of the assassination.

    Arat Dink's findings were submitted to the İstanbul 14th High
    Criminal Court by Cetin during the 24th hearing of the trial. Cetin,
    recalling police officials' statement that no phone conversation was
    found among the suspects on the day of the murder, accused them of
    providing misleading information in the case.

    "We found this information with very limited resources. I find it
    impossible for police officials to not notice this information, given
    the advanced technology they possess," Cetin stated, suggesting that
    police intentionally obscured the evidence.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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