Cyanide Said Found Near Where Spiro Died : Crime: The purported spy had been sought in the shooting deaths of his family in Rancho Santa Fe.
Traces of cyanide were found in a vehicle where a purported British spy died mysteriously days after his wife and three children were fatally shot in the family’s luxurious rental home, a newspaper reported Wednesday.
Law enforcement authorities who requested anonymity told the Blade-Citizen of Oceanside on Tuesday that sheriff’s investigators found evidence of what they believe to be cyanide in the Ford Explorer where the body of Ian Stuart Spiro was found.
The unidentified sources told the newspaper that deputies suspect the deadly drug caused the death of Spiro, a 46-year-old international commodities broker who reportedly had ties to British and U.S. spy agencies.
An autopsy performed Monday did not reveal how Spiro died. The results of toxicology tests are expected in six to nine days, investigators said.
Investigator Charles Kelley of the county medical examiner’s office said that if Spiro was killed by cyanide, it would not have shown up in the autopsy. Toxicology tests would reveal that, he said.
Kelley said he knew nothing about the report that cyanide had been found in the vehicle.
Toxicology tests also were being performed on Spiro’s family to determine whether they were sedated before being shot, sheriff’s homicide Lt. John Tenwolde said Tuesday.
Sheriff’s Department officials said Wednesday that Tenwolde and other homicide investigators were taking a break from the probe for the Veterans Day holiday and would not comment.
Spiro was found slumped over the steering wheel of his vehicle in a remote desert park on Sunday afternoon. There were no signs of struggle or injury on Spiro’s body, officials said, and no weapon was found in his vehicle.
Spiro has been identified by investigators as the prime suspect in the slaying of his family.
Evidence found in the family’s rental home in the exclusive Rancho Santa Fe led investigators to suspect Spiro of killing his wife and children and then committing suicide, Tenwolde said.
However, investigators were not ruling out other theories, including the possibility that Spiro, himself, was murdered, Tenwolde said.
“Our minds are still open. We’re looking at any and everything,” he said.
The disappearance of Spiro, a London native, prompted speculation in the British press that he might have been the target of terrorists from the Middle East. London newspapers have reported that Spiro worked for the CIA and British intelligence in Lebanon in the 1980s and assisted Oliver North in attempts to free the U.S. hostages.
The Sunday Telegraph in London and other newspapers have reported that in 1985 Spiro helped arrange meetings in Lebanon between Anglican church envoy Terry Waite and leaders of the Muslim fundamentalist group Islamic Jihad in an attempt to secure the release of western hostages.
Waite was abducted while visiting Beirut in 1987 and was a hostage himself until last year.
Worried neighbors called authorities to the home where the bodies of Spiro’s 40-year-old wife, Gail, and their daughters, Sara, 16, and Dina, 11, and son Adam, 14, were found on Thursday. Each was shot in the head and found in a separate bedroom.
Sheriff’s officials said they believed Spiro’s wife and children were killed early last week, while he appeared to have died several days later.
Campers spotted Spiro’s body inside his locked vehicle, with the keys in the ignition, at the end of a dirt road about 100 miles east of San Diego. The vehicle was about a mile north of California 22 in Anza-Borrego Desert State Park.
Friends of the family have suggested that the Spiros were experiencing financial difficulties. The neighbors who contacted authorities about their disappearance found a note tacked to the door of the home from a real estate agent inquiring why the latest $5,000 rent payment had not been paid, unidentified sources told The San Diego Union-Tribune.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.