Waterloo Region Record

British police cite ‘high dose’ in woman’s nerve agent death

- GREGORY KATZ

LONDON — British police said Monday they believe the latest victims of poisoning by a nerve agent must have handled the material’s container and been subjected to a “high dose” of the lethal poison.

Metropolit­an Police Assistant Commission­er Neil Basu said the death of 44-year-old Dawn Sturgess on Sunday shows that she and partner Charlie Rowley, 45, were exposed to a large quantity of Novichok, a military-grade nerve agent produced in the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

Basu said the working theory is that their exposure was linked to the earlier Novichok attack in March on ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia, who have both survived despite extended hospitaliz­ations.

Britain has blamed Russia for the poisonings, but Moscow has strongly denied any involvemen­t.

The wide investigat­ion is now a homicide inquiry. Basu expressed sorrow for the death of Sturgess, who had three children.

“Her death has only served to strengthen the resolve of the investigat­ions team,” he said, saying the immediate police priority is to find any container that may be the source of the Novichok.

He said no one else in the Amesbury and Salisbury region where the couple lived in southweste­rn England has shown any sign of Novichok poisoning.

More than 100 police are working to try and search all areas where Sturgess and Rowley had been before they became ill nine days ago.

The search is focused on their properties and a park in Salisbury.

Rowley remains in critical condition in a Salisbury hospital.

Britain blames the Russian state for the attack on Sergei Skripal and his 33-year-old daughter — an allegation Moscow has repeatedly denied.

Moscow says London has declined its offers for a joint investigat­ion into the circumstan­ces of the poisonings.

 ?? MATT CARDY GETTY IMAGES ?? Police and other emergency services respond to a incident in Salisbury, England, on Monday.
MATT CARDY GETTY IMAGES Police and other emergency services respond to a incident in Salisbury, England, on Monday.

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