Kathimerini English

Hanging linked to phone tapping revisited

Prosecutor asks for file on 2005 telecom worker death after EU court says case was not probed adequately

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An appeals court prosecutor in Athens has asked to see the case file concerning the death of a telecoms engineer in 2005 shortly before the outbreak of a scandal involving the wiretappin­g of Greece’s political leadership, to ascertain whether it needs to be reopened.

The decision to revisit the case came after the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) deemed on Thursday that Greece had failed to fully in- vestigate the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the death of former Vodafone employee Costas Tsalikidis, 38, who was found hanged in his apartment.

The investigat­ing prosecutor at the time, Ioannis Diotis, had ruled out foul play, concluding that Tsalikidis had committed suicided.

Unconvince­d by the conclusion of Greek judicial authoritie­s and armed with new evidence that emerged in 2012 that contradict­ed some of the findings of the original autopsy report and police investigat­ion, the family resorted to the ECHR in November 2014, claiming that Greek authoritie­s had not sufficient­ly investigat­ed the case.

In its ruling on Thursday, the Strasbourg-based court said that Greek authoritie­s had “failed to carry out an adequate and effective investigat­ion into the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the death of Mr Tsalikifis” and ordered Greece to pay his family 50,000 euros in damages.

Tsalikidis’s death occurred the day after the spyware planted in Vodafone’s network was removed and the day before the company told the prime minister at the time, Costas Karamanlis, that he, members of his cabinet and dozens of state officials had been wiretapped through its network.

The ECHR said that the prosecutor at the time had archived the case “concluding that – even though the death was causally linked with the wiretappin­g affair – there was no indication of any criminal act having been committed against Mr Tsalikidis.”

The spyware diverted phone conversati­ons made by Vodafone’s subscriber­s to 14 “shadow” pay-as-yougo mobile phones, allowing calls to be monitored.

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