Officials: Traces Predate Spy Poisoning
Distrustful, Litvinenko's Widow Refuses To Coorperate With Russian Investigators
-
Play CBS Video Video Spy Mystery: More Poison Found Sheila MacVicar reports that investigators have found more traces of the poison in an apartment in Germany that killed the Russian spy. The Russian police are allegedly investigating the case as well.
-
Video Expert: On The Spy Mystery An intelligence analyst, Glenmore Trenear-Harvey talks to Tracy Smith about the baffling death of the Russian spy. He dissects many of the recent developments in this mystery.
-
Video Other Victims In Spy Case A funeral was held in London for the ex-Russian spy who was poisoned. Richard Roth reports the case now involves other victims who were exposed to radiation.
-
-
Police cars in front of an estate in Haselau, west of Hamburg, northern Germany, Saturday, Dec 9, 2006. German police said Saturday that they had found traces of radiation at two sites in and near Hamburg linked to a contact of poisoned former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko. (AP Photo/Heribert Proepper)
-
In her first interview since the death of her husband, Marina Litvinenko, widow of former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko, speaks in London, Saturday, Dec. 9, 2006. She said she was reluctant to comment directly on his death as she did not want to interfere with the police investigation. (AP Photo/The Sunday Times)
-
Russian businessman Dmitry Kovtun, who met with ex-spy Alexander Litvinenko in London. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)
-
Alexander Litvinenko in 2002, left and in his hospital bed, at the University College Hospital in central London Monday Nov. 20, 2006. (AP)
-
-
Interactive Mystery Of The Poisoned Spy A former KGB agent gets a fatal dose, and traces of the poison keep turning up.
-
Who's Who Poisoned Spy Case Mystery surrounds death of former KGB agent who was fatally poisoned in London.
-
Interactive Radiation Exposure A look at the effect of different doses of radiation on the human body.
Prosecutors said they were investigating Dmitry Kovtun on suspicion of improper handling of radioactive material.
Investigators said the Russian businessman visited his ex-wife's Hamburg apartment the night before heading to London, where he met Litvinenko on Nov. 1 — the day the former spy is believed to have fallen ill.
Litvinenko was killed by polonium-210. Gerald Kirchner of the German Federal Radiation Protection agency said at a news conference that tests on traces of radiation at the apartment "clearly show that it is polonium-210."
Kovtun arrived in Hamburg from Moscow on Oct. 28 on an Aeroflot flight, officials said.
Radiation was found on a couch in his ex-wife's apartment, on a document he brought to Hamburg immigration authorities and in the passenger seat of the BMW car that picked him up from Hamburg airport, police said.
Kovtun is reportedly being treated in Moscow for symptoms of radiation poisoning. On Saturday, the plane aboard which he flew to London from Hamburg on Nov. 1 tested negative for polonium-210.
Prosecutor Martin Koehnke said Kovtun was being treated as a suspect in an investigation of possible improper handling of radioactive material, even though it could not be determined whether polonium was inside his body or whether he was carrying it separately.
Any connection with Litvinenko's death was a matter for British police to clarify, he said.
Kirchner from the radiation agency said it was possible for Kovtun could already have been poisoned and that he left behind traces through body fluids such as sweat.
Meanwhile, the widow of Alexander Litvinenko says she blames the Kremlin for her husband's death. Marina Litvinenko says she doesn't want to help Russian authorities with their investigation because she doesn't believe they'll "tell the truth."
Litvinenko says she doesn't think Russia's President Vladimir Putin is personally responsible for killing her husband but believes it could have been Russian authorities.
Speaking to The Sunday Times on Saturday, Marina Litvinenko recalled the events of her last days with her husband, whom she refers to affectionately as Sasha.
Litvinenko first told his wife that he was feeling unwell on November 1, and after two nights of feeling sick at home, Litvinenko was admitted to hospital.
At first, Marina said medical staff told her that her husband had an infection or bug of some kind, but she said his symptoms looked "absolutely unusual."
Litvinenko told his wife very early on he felt like someone who had been poisoned — a claim she dismissed outright.
But her husband told her, "'Marina, I feel like people who was poisoned with chemical weapon,' he recognised this," Marina said because Litvinenko has studied the symptoms in military school.
Regardless of his suspicions, she said that her husband was still not sure what was wrong with him.
"One side he saw it was unusual, but he tried to believe it's not poisoning," she said.
Marina said at first medical staff did not tell her he was being moved to intensive care due to his worsening condition.
It was "in case if he needs maybe some transplantation (transplant)," Marina said. "When he moved from sixteen floor to third floor intensive care, (I was told) it was again not because he (had) became more ill. But I saw (his condition) it was (worse) every day, every day he became worse."
There was one vivid moment, Marina said that she felt "suddenly" that she could lose her husband.
It was "so sharp," she said through tears.
Litvinenko, 43, died in London on November 23 after blaming President Vladimir Putin for his poisoning in a deathbed message — an accusation the Kremlin has vehemently denied.
British police, meantime, confirm that two of their detectives on the case are among a number of people who've tested positive for traces of the radioactive substance that killed Litvinenko.
©MMVI, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- Katie and CBS,
Please ask Steve Hartman to do a report on Exxon-Mobile obscene Oil Profits. Like how they were $30 Billion during a single quarter while our gas prices hit $3/gallaon. Also cover how they still haven't paid for a dime of the Valdeez Oile Spill, or perhaps how they get billions in our taxpayer subsidies, or how they fund "think tanks" to pay off "Scientists" to tell us that Global Warming is make believe...
OOPS!! Looks like Exxon-Mobile PAYS for Steve Hartman to do his inane stories about junk-info-tainment. Guess we won't be hearing about any Exxon Malfeasance from CBS! Guess the Corporate Bribed Suck-ups (CBS) network has gone 100% corrupt. - Reply to this comment
- Sounds more like this guy was involved smuggling this material, the whole story doe not add up. if he was being assassinated they would simply pop him in the garage or someplace with a gun outfitted with a silencer even, gone quickly cleanly and done with.
But to suggest he was poisoned by a RARE radioactive material seems pretty far fetched, especially since those handling or coming into contact with it to give to him would themselves be at risk.
A more likely scenario is this guy, a confirmed EX KGB spy, got hold of this material and had planned to either sell, transfer, or use it in some fashion. I can think of a dozen reasons what his plans for it might have been- murder of the Govt officials that wronged him while he was a spy, revenge, money, fame, you name it. Somehow though maybe he miscalculated how potent the stuff is and didn't take enough precautions.
When he got sick, he stuck to a highly unlikely fantasy that Putin poisoned him. Someone like Putin or Bush can have someone "removed" a lot easier, quicker and with less risk, and using a rar radioactive element that can be traced would have been stupid. - Reply to this comment




