Santa Fe New Mexican

British police continue hunt for deadly poison

- By Gregory Katz

LONDON — Authoritie­s conducted extensive forensic tests Saturday looking for the source of a nerve agent that sickened two people thought to have handled a contaminat­ed item from the March attack on a Russian ex-spy and his daughter.

A police officer also underwent a precaution­ary test at a hospital to check for possible contaminat­ion related to the case, but Wiltshire police said late Saturday that he had been cleared.

The man and woman poisoned a week ago are in critical condition at Salisbury District Hospital, which is also where Sergei and Yulia Skripal spent months being treated after they were poisoned.

Authoritie­s have said all four were sickened by Novichok, a nerve agent weapon developed by the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

Police think 44-year-old Dawn Sturgess and her partner, 45-yearold Charley Rowley, had secondary exposure to the chemical weapon used in the attack on the Skripals.

Police have said they are looking for a vial that may contain Novichok. It is a slow and painstakin­g process as there is no easy way to use modern technology to pinpoint the location of the rare nerve agent.

Officials have said the search could take weeks or months. It has brought more than 100 officers to Salisbury and the nearby town of Amesbury as suspect sites are condoned off to protect the public from possible contaminat­ion.

The police officer given the all clear underwent “appropriat­e specialist tests,” the Salisbury hospital said.

The hospital did not say whether the unidentifi­ed officer might have been exposed to Novichok. But a statement said the officer initially sought medical advice at another hospital “in connection with the ongoing incident in Amesbury,” which is where the latest victims developed symptoms of Novichok poisoning.

The Salisbury hospital added that it “has seen a number of members of the public who have come to the hospital with health concerns since this incident started and none have required any treatment.”

 ?? MATT DUNHAM/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Emergency workers in military protective suits search the fenced off John Baker House for homeless people Friday in Salisbury, England. British police are searching for a container feared to be contaminat­ed with traces of the deadly nerve agent Novichok.
MATT DUNHAM/ASSOCIATED PRESS Emergency workers in military protective suits search the fenced off John Baker House for homeless people Friday in Salisbury, England. British police are searching for a container feared to be contaminat­ed with traces of the deadly nerve agent Novichok.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States