Malta Independent

Karin Grech evidence goes missing, judicial protest filed

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Nearly 40 years after teenager Karin Grech was murdered with a letter bomb, crucial evidence has gone missing, a judicial protest filed yesterday said.

The girl’s father, former Labour MP Edwin Grech, his wife Pearl and son Kevin have officially held the Attorney General, Commission­er of Police and the Director General of Courts responsibl­e for the disappeara­nce of a crucial piece of evidence.

Sources from the courts have claimed to this newsroom that preliminar­y investigat­ions showed that no files were missing.

Karin was killed by a letter bomb in December 1977, and the inquiry into her death is still officially open.

The Grech family argued the defendants were responsibl­e for the lack of progress of the investigat­ion. The family has been made aware that pieces of the envelope which had contained the explosive have gone missing from the courts.

This evidence could have shed light on the crime, thanks to new techniques of forensic science developed in the 40 years since the murder.

At the time of the killing, Grech was working as a consultant obstetrici­an and gynaecolog­ist in the United Kingdom.

He had returned to Malta during strike action carried out by doctors to provide services at St Luke’s Hospital.

Less than three months after his return, on 28 December, 1977, a large brown envelope containing a packet in Christmas wrapping paper was received at the doctor’s residence in San Gwann.

His 15 year-old daughter Karin opened the package, which was a letter-bomb, and was severely wounded in the ensuing blast, dying later that same day. Her brother, Kevin, was also grievously injured and had to be treated abroad.

“While a magisteria­l inquiry into the murder is still ongoing, despite the indication­s, assistance and cooperatio­n of the Grechs, there has been no positive outcome and those who perpetrate­d this barbaric and shocking act have to this day not been brought before a court,” reads the protest.

Lawyers Franco Debono, Amadeus Cachia and Yanika Vidal signed the judicial protest.

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