On June 5, 2010, Truth for Madeleine reported an article about the strange circumstances of Colin Sahlke’s death in Skipton on April 19th (here).

Coroner Richard G. Taylor recorded an open verdict on Colin Sahlke's death due to morphine poisoning.
The inquest into his death recently revealed that he died from a morphine dose on top of alcohol in the form of approximately 12 cans of beer. The real mystery is that there was no evidence on his body of a morphine injection and his family were bemused by the cause of death.
The story was reported in Pendle Today (here) on October 11, 2010. Interestingly the Coroner Richard Taylor could find no evidence of suicide.
For convenience, here is the article repeated:
Tragic death of ex-para who joined in hunt for Madeleine McCann
Published on Mon Oct 11 16:29:52 BST 2010
FRIENDS and relatives of a Nelson man who died from a combination of morphine and alcohol poisoning said they were mystified how the drug got into his system.
Mr Colin Sahlke (48), of Carr Road, was found dead in his flat by his landlord on April 19th.
Ex-paratrooper Mr Sahlke and another ex-soldier, Stephen Taylor, flew out to Portugal three years ago to help in the search for missing British four-year-old Madeleine McCann.
An inquest at the Coroner’s Court in Burnley heard from his partner of three years, Christina Ellis, who said it was clear Mr Sahlke had been drinking too much.
She said: “He tried to keep it hidden but it put a huge strain on our relationship. He’d spent time in hospital and found life very difficult.
“I ended the relationship three weeks before he died. The last time I saw him was the day before, when he was drinking in the Station Hotel. He would drink all day but only took prescribed drugs.”
A post-mortem examination carried out by pathologist Dr Zuhair Twaij found a very high level of alcohol in Mr Sahlke’s system plus morphine in his blood. He gave the cause of death as morphine toxicity exacerbated by alcohol consumption.
Miss Ellis added: “Colin never took heroin or morphine so I don’t know how that got into his system. He’d made threats to harm himself in the past and once threatened to throw himself off the multi-storey car park in Nelson.”
Recording an open verdict, East Lancashire Coroner Mr Richard Taylor said: “Somehow this drug got into his system. The normal way would be by injection but there was no evidence of a needle site.
“However, we can’t avoid the fact it was in his system. I have no evidence, though, that his death was related to an intention to take his own life.
“I’ve no doubt he had a huge tolerance to alcohol and his drinking was not accidental. The presence of morphine is unexplained and we will probably never have an explanation. When people are depressed they do things they don’t normally do.”



May 23rd, 2011 at 3:43 pm
Vreemd dat hier weer lanchester wordt genoemd.
Kwam een van de ouders van Madeleine daar niet vandaa?
January 3rd, 2012 at 7:13 pm
The words ‘Dr.Kelly’ spring to mind!!
May 5th, 2012 at 11:33 am
People with medical skills would be able to do it. If you get my meaning.