Daily Mail

Weekend killers ... deadly duo jetted in, left poison on door and flew back on Sunday night

- By Sue Reid

SIX months after the Salisbury attack, two Russian secret service hitmen have been unmasked as the suspected perpetrato­rs of the audacious assassinat­ion attempt on British soil. Thanks to CCTV and meticulous detective work, with officers piecing together the pair’s movements from hours of footage and countless cameras, it has been possible to reconstruc­t their journey from Moscow to London, on to the Wiltshire cathedral city and back on a plane to Russia. They were in Britain for less than three days.

THE FLIGHT TO UK FRIdAy, March 2: The two men, said to be aged about 40, leave Moscow on an Aeroflot flight for London using bogus names on genuine Russian passports.

The documents do not contain the paternal line of the pair; the middle names of Russians are routinely used on identity papers or passports and denote a father’s name.

one of the names used, Alexander Petrov, is also suspicious. It is common in Russia as John Smith once was in the uK.

It is assumed the men made no attempt to disguise themselves. Many criminals have been known – like in the movies – to use prosthetic face masks to avoid being identified by cameras.

We do not know whether the deadly nerve agent novichok, used in the attack and carried by the duo in a counterfei­t nina Ricci perfume bottle, was in their possession as they entered Britain.

If it was not, perhaps they collected the lethal material from accomplice­s already here.

having cleared airport security, they take the train to London’s Victoria station, arriving at 5.40pm. Twenty minutes later, they transfer to the Tube and travel three stops to Waterloo.

THEIR HOTEL (YARDS FROM POLICE STATION)

FRoM Waterloo, they cross the Thames to go to the £48-anight, two-star City Stay hotel in Bow Road, east London, where they had booked in for two nights. It boasts of having kitchen facilities in every bedroom and being located near the London undergroun­d.

however, a recent review on Trip-Advisor said the hotel is ‘desperatel­y depressing’ and ‘smelled of damp’. A guest complains online that he could not sleep as police sirens blared from 11pm until 2pm which – ironically considerin­g the Russians’ choice of hotel – was ‘not helped by the fact the police station is across the road’.

The Metropolit­an Police confirmed yesterday that ‘ low’ levels of novichok were found in the hotel in May, during their investigat­ion.

The hotel released a statement saying it is ‘fully supporting the police investigat­ion’ and is ‘open for business as usual’.

Assistant Commission­er neil Basu insisted there was no threat to public health, but has asked anyone who stayed there between March 4 and May 4 to contact Scotland yard.

THEIR DUMMY RUN TO SALISBURY

SATuRdAy, March 3: CCTV footage shows them go from their hotel to Waterloo station at 11.45am and then take the train to Salisbury.

They don’t stay in the city long. They arrive at 2.25pm and leave for London soon after 4pm. By 8pm, they are back at their hotel for a second night. It was a round-trip of 240 miles, with a return fare of about £40 and the fastest one-way journey taking about an hour.

THE PAIR STRIKE AT SKRIPAL’S HOME

SundAy, March 4: From Bow, they retrace their steps – leaving the hotel at 8am to go to Waterloo on the Tube, and again to Salisbury by train.

The pair, one in a woollen hat and the other in a peaked cap, are caught on CCTV at Salisbury railway station at 11.48am wearing the same puffa jackets and jeans in which they arrived at Gatwick.

Ten minutes later they are spotted by another surveillan­ce camera at a petrol station in Wilton Road, a short walk from Christie Miller Road – where Sergei Skripal and his daughter yulia lived.

Police say this was just moments before the attack, when novichok, in the perfume bottle, is believed to have been smeared on the door handle of the former spy’s safe house.

EN ROUTE TO RUSSIA THE VERY SAME DAY

AnoTheR CCTV camera picks up the suspects – by now grinning and looking relaxed – at 1.05pm in Fisherton Street, before stopping to look at Salisbury’s city hall. They then head for the rail station, where they take the 1.50pm train back to London, arriving 55 minutes later at Waterloo.

It was, by any standards, a quick turnaround for what was obviously a well-planned assassinat­ion attempt.

The next sighting of the men is after their arrival at Waterloo, at 4.45pm, when they board a fast train to heathrow airport at 6.30pm.

Less than an hour later – at 7.28 pm – they are spotted going through passport control and security without any questions being asked, prior to going airside. They then board their plane to Moscow’s internatio­nal airport, Sheremetye­vo, at 10.30pm.

LUNCH THAT ENDED IN HOSPITAL DASH

AS the plane sets off for Russia, the Skripals have been fighting for their lives in hospital

for hours after coming into contact with the novichok.

They are likely to have been poisoned as a result of touching the front door handle as they left their house to go for lunch, by which

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