Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner (CFK) has reversed herself and now says she is convinced the death of top Argentine prosecutor Alberto Nisman did not kill himself.  Although prosecutors say the evidence points to suicide, there has been widespread doubt.

And that’s mostly because 51-year old Nisman had just accused CFK of interfering with his investigation into the 1994 deadly bombing of a Jewish community center in Buenos Aires in which Iran had long been suspected, allegedly to secure an oil deal with Tehran.  He was supposed to present evidence this week, but died before it could happen.

CFK denies the conspiracy charge, and ups the ante with a new allegation of a mysterious plot:  In a letter published on her website, President Fernandez refers to “the suicide (I’m convinced) was no suicide”;  she charges that the allegations he leveled against her was the product of “false information” given to him by some sort of rogue agents.

Adding to the mystery, CFK points out that the .22 caliber long gun found with Nisman in his bathroom where he died of a gunshot wound to the head was borrowed.  She wonders why he would bother to do that when he already owned two handguns.

Prosecutors rain all over the conspiracy theories from both sides, noting that Nisman was found alone in his 13th floor apartment, and the door had been locked from the inside.