Former Soviet spy mysteriously sickened
SALISBURY, England — British media reported Monday that a former Russian spy was in critical condition after coming into contact with an “unknown substance,” a case that immediately drew parallels to the poisoning of former Russian agent Alexander Litvinenko.
National and local authorities said only that a man and a woman were found unconscious Sunday afternoon on a bench in a shopping mall in Salisbury, an English city about 90 miles west of London.
British media identified him as Sergei Skripal, 66, who was convicted in Russia on charges of spying for Britain and sentenced in 2006 to 13 years in prison. Skripal was freed in 2010 as part of a U.S.-Russian spy swap, which followed the exposure of a ring of Russian sleeper agents in the United States.
Wiltshire Police, which is responsible for the Salisbury area, gave the approximate ages of the unconscious pair and said they appeared to know one another and “did not have any visible injuries.”
“They are currently being treated for suspected exposure to an unknown substance. Both are currently in a critical condition in intensive care,” the police department said in a statement.
The discovery of the two people led to a dramatic decontamination effort. Crews in billowing yellow moon suits worked into the night spraying down the street, and the Salisbury hospital’s emergency room was closed.
The BBC, which first identified Skripal as one of the victims, quoted eyewitness Freya Church as saying it looked like the woman and man had taken “something quite strong.”
“On the bench there was a couple, an older guy and a younger girl. She was sort of leaned in on him. It looked like she had passed out, maybe,” Church said.
“He was doing some strange hand movements, looking up to the sky,” she said.
Public records list Skripal as having an address in Salisbury.
Skripal served with Russia’s military intelligence, often known by its Russianlanguage acronym GRU, and retired in 1999. He then worked at the Foreign Ministry until 2003 and later became involved in business.
After his 2004 arrest in Moscow, he confessed to having been recruited by British intelligence in 1995 and said he provided information about GRU agents in Europe, receiving more than $100,000 in return.
At the time of Skripal’s trial, the Russian media quoted the FSB domestic security agency as saying that the damage from his activities could be compared to harm inflicted by Oleg Penkovsky, a GRU colonel who spied for the United States and Britain. Penkovsky was executed in 1963.
Police urged the public not to speculate, but few could avoid invoking the name of Litvinenko — the former Russian agent who died after drinking polonium210-laced tea in a swanky London hotel in 2006.
His bizarre illness was initially treated as unexplained; evidence eventually emerged indicating he had been deliberately poisoned.
A British judge wrote in an 2016 report that Litvinenko’s death was an assassination carried out by Russia’s security services — with the likely approval of President Vladimir Putin. The Russian government has denied any responsibility.