That
was always the obvious conclusion - but why?
British
oil executive murdered in Brussels may have been victim of
professional hit by assassin
Family
said to believe killing on Brussels street had hallmarks of
assassination
26
October, 2012
Police
investigating the murder of a British oil executive who was shot dead
in front of his wife in a Brussels suburb warned last night that the
case could take years to solve.
A
police spokeswoman said officers were approaching the “difficult
investigation” from several angles, after Nicholas Mockford’s
relatives reportedly raised fears that he had been targeted for
assassination.
One
family member, who asked not to be named, told one newspaper that
they thought he was killed in a professional hit.
The
relation said: "We are all confused about what has happened.
Nick was a genuinely lovely, clean-cut, mild-mannered family man."
He
added: "He was shot so calmly and so quickly, it smacks horribly
of a professional hit, but we can't fathom why. He isn't the type to
cave in to blackmail and it just doesn't compute."
The
oil giant ExxonMobil said today it did not believe the murder –
which occurred on 14 October but was not revealed until today – was
linked to Mr Mockford’s work.
Mr
Mockford, 60, was shot as he left an Italian restaurant at about 10pm
following a dinner with his wife. The killer fired three times –
once as the victim lay on the ground – while his wife Mary was
beaten by a second man and left covered in blood, cradling her
husband and shouting for help. He died on the way to hospital.
Belgian
police declined to speculate yesterday on the motive for the killing
but have reportedly told his family they believe it was a mugging
gone wrong.
The
family declined to comment when contacted by The Independent but are
said to be sceptical of that theory, believing the murder had all the
hallmarks of an assassination.
ExxonMobil
said in a statement: “We were shocked by the tragic death of Nick
Mockford, one of our employees, a fortnight ago in Brussels. Mr
Mockford was a department manager at our office close to Brussels but
we have no indication that the incident was work-related.”
Witnesses
said they saw Mr Mockford and his wife walk across the street to
their Lexus car before shots were fired and two men were seen running
away, one of them carrying a motorcycle helmet.
Mr
Mockford is understood to have worked for the oil company since the
1970s. He was the head of marketing for interim technologies at
ExxonMobil Chemicals Europe, promoting new types of greener fuel.
A
spokesman said Mr Mockford headed a team of about 35 people at the
company’s Brussels office.
Brought
up in Leicestershire, he had moved abroad some years ago and had
lived in Belgium and Singapore.
Geneviève
Seressia, a spokeswoman for the Brussels prosecutor’s office, said:
“The investigation is fully running, but it is a difficult
investigation. We are investigating all different angles, and it
depends on how quickly we can find elements of information. It’s
impossible to predict how long this can take – it might be handled
quickly, but could take a long time, even years.”
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