The Herald

Officers face disciplina­ry action for death investigat­ion

- ADELA WHITTINGHA­M

OFFICERS investigat­ing the death of a conspiracy theorist are facing disciplina­ry proceeding­s as his mysterious end remains unexplaine­d.

Max Bates-spiers, from Kent, died suddenly in a house in Poland in 2016 – days before he was due to speak at a conference about conspiracy theories and UFOS.

The 39-year-old is said to have vomited black fluid shortly before his death. But Polish authoritie­s initially recorded he had died from natural causes. A second post-mortem examinatio­n when his body was returned to east Kent proved inconclusi­ve.

Now a coroner in Canterbury has revealed that Polish police are facing disciplina­ry action for their handling of the case. Me Bates-spiers’s inquest was originally opened in December 2016 and adjourned until last November.

But coroner Alan Blundson said at the time that he did not have enough informatio­n to proceed with the full inquest.

At a pre-inquest review held at The Guildhall in Sandwich, Mr Blundson also heard there were discrepanc­ies in accounts given by the emergency services at the time of Mr Batesspier­s’s death.

The father-of-two was said to have sent a text to his mother Vanessa Bates-spiers shortly before he died saying: “Your boy’s in trouble. If anything happens, investigat­e”.

It is hoped witnesses in Poland, who have submitted statements but are not obliged to attend, will give their evidence at the inquest in January via Skype.

Mrs Bates-spiers suspects her son – who made a name for himself in the shadowy world of conspiracy theorists and sought to expose government cover-ups – may have been murdered because his work “made him enemies”. Originally from Canterbury, Mr Bates-spiers was a former classmate with the actor Orlando Bloom.

Speaking after the latest hearing, Mrs Bates-spiers said the hardest thing to cope with is the uncertaint­y surroundin­g her son’s death.

She said:”my son should be here. He was very fit and healthy when I said goodbye to him. He was in great health. His death was an enormous blow. I didn’t expect him to go to Poland and not come back”.

The full inquest is due to take place the Archbishop’s Palace in in Maidstone for three days in January next year.

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