Murdered British spy found stuffed into sports bag

A BRITISH spy found murdered in his flat might have lain undiscovered for up to two weeks.

Murdered British spy found stuffed into sports bag

The man, named locally as Gareth Williams, was found stuffed in a large sports holdall in the bath of his central London home.

Williams, aged in his 30s, was employed as a communications officer at the Government Communication Headquarters (GCHQ) “listening post” in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire.

He was on secondment to the riverside headquarters of MI6, the Secret Intelligence Service, about half a mile from the flat.

Officers discovered Williams after breaking into the flat on Monday afternoon when the alarm was raised by colleagues who had not seen him for “some time”.

They found his decomposing body, as well as his mobile phone and several SIM cards laid out nearby at the top-floor flat in Alderney Street, Pimlico.

A postmortem examination was being carried out yesterday.

Sources close to the inquiry said it is not clear how he died and played down speculation that the murder is linked to his secretive line of work.

One source said: “The suggestion there is terrorism or national security links to this case is pretty low down the list of probabilities.”

Neighbours described Williams as an “extremely friendly” and athletic man who enjoyed cycling and had a strong Welsh accent.

They said he had lived in London for about a year and was planning to return to Cheltenham, where he rented a flat.

A postwoman who called at the block yesterday said he often collected parcels at the communal front door.

Secretary Laura Houghton, 30, said: “His windows were always shut and curtains were often closed. I could never tell if anyone was in. It was strange that we never saw him come and go. I just assumed he worked away.”

Eileen Booth, 73, who lives opposite, said detectives told her the murder might have taken place two weeks ago. She said: “A few years ago, I would definitely have known who it was that had been killed. But nobody knows each other these days. Detectives came round and asked for our eye colour and height. They said this probably happened two weeks ago.”

The scene of the murder is a two-storey flat on a prestigious street among a row of expensive five-storey Victorian townhouses.

Residents are mainly bankers and politicians, including former home secretaries Michael Howard and Lord Brittan.

The ownership of the building is hidden behind the private company New Rodina, registered in the British Virgin Islands. The property was bought for £675,250 in 2000 and remortgaged twice. The word rodina means “motherland” in Russian and Bulgarian.

Officials at Scotland Yard’s Counter Terrorism Command and domestic intelligence agency MI5 have been kept up to date about the police inquiry.

The murder inquiry is being led by officers from Scotland Yard’s Homicide and Serious Crime Command.

A spokesman said the body was yet to be formally identified.

He said investigators were following up “several lines of inquiry” but declined to confirm the occupation of the dead man.

It is the first murder on British soil of someone linked to the secret services since the death of Alexander Litvinenko in 2006.

The former KGB agent died in hospital after drinking tea laced with radioactive polonium-210.

Bulgarian defector Georgi Markov was killed by an assassin who used an umbrella to fire a deadly ricin pellet into his leg as he walked across Waterloo Bridge in September 1978.

A Foreign Office spokesman said: “It is long-standing Government policy not to confirm or deny that any individual works for the intelligence agencies.”

A GCHQ spokesman said: “There is an ongoing police investigation and it would not be appropriate for us to comment at all.

“We have nothing to add. Our policy is not to comment on individual members of staff or whether they are staff.”

Williams, 31, joined the University of Cambridge in 2000 to undertake a postgraduate certificate in advanced studies in mathematics but dropped out.

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