Daily Mail

WAS SPY POISON ED IN HIS HOME?

Nerve agent may have been sent in post Stricken policeman went to victim’s house 180 military are deployed to Salisbury

- By Claire Duffin, Inderdeep Bains and Chris Greenwood

POLICE are investigat­ing whether former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter were poisoned at home before being found unconsciou­s in a city centre.

It emerged yesterday that the policeman left seriously ill after being exposed to a nerve agent following the attack had visited Mr Skripal’s house – after trying to help him at the scene where he was found collapsed.

As the inquiry into the suspected Kremlin- back assassinat­ion attempt entered its seventh day:

Investigat­ors in hazmat suits descended on the cemetery in Salisbury where the body of Mr Skripal’s wife is buried and his son’s ashes are interred, and removed flowers and trinkets from the graves.

More than 180 troops arrived in the cathedral city to help with decontamin­ation.

Detectives seized CCTV thought to show Mr Skripal and his daughter Yulia minutes before they were found on Sunday.

Sources said one line of inquiry is that the poison was delivered through the post to the former spy’s home.

Mr Skripal, 66, and his daughter, 33, who remained in a critical condition in hospital last night, had visited the cemetery in London Road, Salisbury, on the day they were found to lay flowers.

Yesterday officers in hazmat suits were seen placing a blue forensic tent over his son Alexander’s memorial stone and cordoning off his wife Liudmila’s grave.

Police search teams were also seen taking large blue evidence bags from the cemetery and placing them in airtight buckets.

It is understood they were removing flowers and trinkets, including a small toy dog, left at their graves. Officers guarded the cemetery while investigat­ors in protective gear carried out the work. Mrs Skripal’s body was not exhumed, but detectives have not ruled out removing it for forensic tests at a later stage.

Her death certificat­e says she died of cancer in 2012. Their son is believed to have died of liver failure while on holiday in Russia last year aged only 43.

More than 180 troops descended on Salisbury yesterday to help at the numerous crime scenes in the city. A convoy of military vehicles rolled into the car park at Salisbury District Hospital to recover a police car which may have been contaminat­ed.

Some residents complained they were not being given informatio­n by the authoritie­s. David Bayfield, 76, who runs the Salisbury Family Butcher stall close to the bench where the Skripals collapsed, told the Daily Telegraph: ‘We are fed up being kept in the dark.

‘Everyone is saying it’s fine, but there are police everywhere and now the Army. How can it be fine?’

Investigat­ions also continued at the Zizzi Italian restaurant and a pub where Mr Skripal and his daughter ate and drank on the day of the attack, and at his house on the outskirts of the city.

A close relative of Detective Sergeant Nick Bailey, 38, who fell ill after rushing to the scene, said that as well as tending to the victims on the bench where they were found, he was also among the first to enter Mr Skripal’s home a few miles away after the attack.

She said: ‘He was at both places. First he was where they collapsed, trying to help them, then he went to the house, in that order.’

Lord Blair, who was Scotland Yard Commission­er when Russian Alexander Litvinenko was murdered in London in 2006, suggested that the house could be at the centre of the inquiry.

‘Clearly what they’re trying to find out at the moment is how was this delivered personally. There are some indication­s,’ he said. ‘The officer has actually been to the house, whereas there’s a doctor who looked after the patients in the open who hasn’t been affected at all.’

Mr Skripal’s four-bedroom semi in a quiet cul-de-sac in Salisbury was surrounded by emergency vehicles yesterday. Aerial photograph­s showed police scouring every inch of the property, with forensic tents erected over his driveway and two areas of his back garden. A fourth police tent had been set up on the road.

A fleet of ambulances, police cars and unmarked vans also surrounded the property. Detectives were seen carrying blue boxes marked ‘ Chemical, Biological, Radiologic­al, Nuclear – Scene kit’.

Officers have recovered Mr Skripal’s maroon BMW from a police car pound, and taken away the blue Mercedes people carrier used to collect his daughter from an airport on Saturday. The search, recovery and decontamin­ation operation is now one of the largest since the 7/7 London terrorist attacks in July 2005.

Troops from the RAF Regiment, Royal Marine commandos and specialist chemical teams from the Army were deployed to Salisbury yesterday as the hunt for clues to pinpoint a suspect ramped up.

They were asked by police to step in so they could help remove contaminat­ed vehicles and objects from numerous locations across the city. It is understood the troops were asked to help move ambulances contaminat­ed at the scene.

Any evidence found by the troops will be taken to the Ministry of Defence’s laboratory at nearby Porton Down to be assessed. Police

‘Remained critical’

advised the public not to be alarmed by the sight of military vehicles, saying their expertise was necessary for the complex probe.

The circumstan­ces of the attack, and its echoes of the fatal poisoning of Mr Litvinenko, have prompted questions over the Government’s response if the evidence points to a state-sponsored assassinat­ion plot.

Moscow has repeatedly denied it had anything to do with the attack, as it did when Mr Litvinenko was poisoned with radioactiv­e polonium-210 in his cup of tea. A public inquiry concluded that the Kremlin ordered his assassinat­ion, with the assent of President Putin.

Home Secretary Amber Rudd will chair a second meeting of the Cobra emergency committee today with ministers and security chiefs. Whitehall sources said they were closer to establishi­ng what happened.

Miss Rudd, who visited Salisbury yesterday, said police officers who rushed to help the stricken spy said the scene ‘didn’t feel quite right’. But she said their suspicions ‘didn’t stop them for a minute’ from fighting to save the lives of Mr Skripal and his daughter.

Mr Skripal, who passed secrets to Britain while working for Russian intelligen­ce, was jailed in his home country in 2006 but came to the UK in 2010 in a spy-swap deal.

MPs are urging Theresa May to ban Vladimir Putin’s cronies from coming to Britain and buying properties by backing changes to a Bill aimed at stamping out corruption.

A cross-party group, led by former Tory minister Andrew Mitchell, are pressuring the Government to beef up a British version of America’s Magnitsky Act, which freezes the assets and bans the visas of human rights violators.

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