Times Colonist

U.K. police find bottle of deadly nerve agent

- GREGORY KATZ

LONDON — British detectives investigat­ing the poisoning of two people with a military-grade nerve agent said Friday that a small bottle found in the home of one of the victims tested positive for Novichok, a lethal substance produced in the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

Dawn Sturgess, 44, and Charlie Rowley, 45, were sickened on June 30 in a southweste­rn England town not far from Salisbury, where British authoritie­s say a Russian ex-spy and his daughter were poisoned with Novichok in March.

Sturgess died in a hospital on Sunday. Rowley was in critical condition for more than a week, but has regained consciousn­ess.

The Metropolit­an Police said the bottle was found during searches of Rowley’s house Wednesday, and scientists confirmed the substance in the bottle was Novichok. Police have interviewe­d Rowley since he became conscious.

Police are still looking into where the bottle came from and how it got into Rowley’s house. They said further tests would be done to try to establish if the nerve agent was from the same batch that was used to poison Russian ex-spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia.

More than 100 police officers had been searching for the source of Rowley and Sturgess’s exposure in the town of Amesbury, where they lived, and Salisbury, where the Skripals were poisoned.

The Skripals survived and were released from the Salisbury hospital before Rowley and Sturgess were poisoned and taken there. British authoritie­s took the father and daughter to a secret protected location.

British police said earlier they suspected the new victims had handled a container contaminat­ed with Novichok and had no reason to think Rowley and Sturgess were targeted deliberate­ly.

Assistant Police Commission­er Neil Basu, Britain’s top counterter­rorism officer, told local residents this week that Novichok could remain active for 50 years if it kept in a sealed container. He said he could not guarantee there were no more traces of the lethal poison in the area.

Basu said Friday that cordons would remain in place in some locations to protect the public despite the apparent breakthrou­gh in the case. He would not provide more informatio­n about the bottle found in Rowley’s home.

“This is clearly a significan­t and positive developmen­t. However, we cannot guarantee that there isn’t any more of the substance left,” Basu said. The continued blocking off of areas would “allow thorough searches to continue as a precaution­ary measure for public safety and to assist the investigat­ion team.”

Britain’s Foreign Office said Friday that the U.K. has asked the Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons to collect samples for analysis at its labs. The organizati­on has the power to assign blame for chemical weapons use.

Public health officials said the risk of exposure to the public is low, but advised people not to pick up any strange items.

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