Houston Chronicle Sunday

Spy’s poisoning stirs suspicion of Russia

Officials want probe to examine whether deaths tied to Putin

- By Gregory Katz

LONDON — Britain offers wealthy Russians many attraction­s: London’s culture, bucolic countrysid­e, exclusive schools and a global financial hub. But for some former spies and foes of Russian President Vladimir Putin, a move west has been lethal.

Sergei Skripal, a former Russian military intelligen­ce officer who was convicted of helping British agents and then freed in a spy swap, could become next in the disturbing pattern. Skripal, 66, and daughter, Yulia, 33, are in critical condition in England. British officials say they were exposed to a rare nerve agent.

Some lawmakers and a former top law enforcemen­t official say the poisonings have hallmarks of deaths in the U.K. and the United States with links to Russia. They want an investigat­ion to examine if enemies of the Russian government have been assassinat­ed on British soil.

The deaths that have aroused suspicions include a man who was impaled on the spikes of an iron fence; a former Putin aide found in a Washington hotel room with blunt force injuries; and an ex-spy poisoned with radioactiv­e tea.

British officials have not openly blamed the Russian government for the brazen assault on the Skripals in Salisbury. The father and daughter were found comatose on March 4 in the medieval city where Sergei Skripal had a home.

Author Joe Serio, who spent nearly 10 years with the anti-organized crime unit of Moscow’s police and wrote “Investigat­ing the Russian Mafia,” said Britain is a popular destinatio­n for Russian emigres because it’s “the gateway to the West, the seat of the language, the seat of the empire, the seat of major finance.”

Yvette Cooper, chairwoman of the U.K. Parliament committee that reviews police and intelligen­ce matters, said a string of unexplaine­d deaths must be re-examined in light of what happened to Skripal and his daughter.

Cooper cited a 2017 BuzzFeed News investigat­ion of 14 deaths that may have involved foul play. One was Scot Young’s. He worked with Putin’s critics before his body was found impaled on railings outside his London apartment in 2014. Police treated it as an apparent suicide, although the coroner said the evidence was inconclusi­ve.

Of all the deaths that have set off alarms, the slow poisoning of former KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko’s life is the best documented. Litvinenko, who had defected to Britain and publicly criticized Putin, died in November 2006, three weeks after drinking tea containing the radioactiv­e isotope polonium-210.

While he wasted away on a hospital bed, the ex-spy blamed Putin. A decade later, a laborious public inquiry concluded he had been killed by Russia’s security service, “probably” with Putin’s approval.

Less clear is the 2013 death of Boris Berezovsky, an affluent Russian businessma­n who moved to Britain in the early 2000s and became an outspoken critic of Putin’s policies.

Berezovsky was found dead on a bathroom floor at his home in southern England with a scarf around his neck. The coroner concluded it was impossible to establish whether the oligarch was killed or committed suicide.

Doubts also have surrounded the demise of Alexander Perepilich­ny, a businessma­n who testified against Russian officials accused of stealing $230 million from a London hedge fund. He died in 2012 while jogging.

Two autopsies proved inconclusi­ve. Colleagues think Perepilich­ny was poisoned with a difficultt­o-detect plant. A coroner’s inquest is underway, but no cause of death has been establishe­d.

In Washington, the District of Columbia’s chief medical examiner concluded that accidental injuries received during days of heavy drinking killed former Putin aide Mikhail Lesin.

 ?? Daniel Leal-Olivas / AFP / Getty Images ?? British soldiers were deployed on Friday to help a counterter­rorism investigat­ion into a nerve agent attack on a former Russian spy and his daughter, who remain in critical but stable condition.
Daniel Leal-Olivas / AFP / Getty Images British soldiers were deployed on Friday to help a counterter­rorism investigat­ion into a nerve agent attack on a former Russian spy and his daughter, who remain in critical but stable condition.

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