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Death of a Spy

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Poisoned Former KGB Spy Dies in London

By TARIQ PANJA, Associated Press Writer

Thu Nov 23, 7:57 PM

LONDON - A former Russian spy who said he had been poisoned died Thursday night at a London hospital, following a mysterious and rapid decline that left doctors puzzled over the cause of death, officials said.

Alexander Litvinenko, a fierce critic of the Russian government, had suffered heart failure and was heavily sedated as medical staff struggled to pinpoint what had made the 43-year-old critically ill.

"The matter is being investigated as an unexplained death," London's Metropolitan police said in a statement.

The former spy said he believed he had been poisoned on Nov. 1, while investigating the slaying of another Kremlin detractor _ investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya. His hair fell out, his throat became swollen and his immune and nervous systems were severely damaged, he said.

Just hours before he lost consciousness on Tuesday, Litvinenko acknowledged in an interview with The Times newspaper of London that he would likely die and claimed the Kremlin was directly involved in his poisoning.

"This is what it takes to prove one has been telling the truth," Litvinenko was quoted as saying.

Doctors at London's University College Hospital said tests had virtually ruled out poisoning by thallium and radiation _ toxins once considered possible culprits behind the poisoning.

"The medical team at the hospital did everything possible to save his life," hospital spokesman Jim Down said, confirming the Russian's death Thursday night. "Every avenue was explored to establish the cause of his condition, and the matter is now an ongoing investigation being dealt with by detectives."

Earlier in the day, as hospital officials reported that Litvinenko was deteriorating rapidly, family and friends rushed to his bedside.

Friend Alex Goldfarb joined Litvinenko's wife Marina, his son Anatoli and the former agent's father at the hospital.

"He went into a cardiac failure overnight and the hospital put him on artificial heart support," Goldfarb said. "He's on the ventilator, he's getting artificial resuscitation."

Anti-terrorist police were investigating the poisoning, which friends and dissidents also allege was carried out at the behest of the Russian government. Litvinenko sought asylum in Britain in 2000, and has been a relentless critic of the Kremlin and the Russian security services ever since.

Litvinenko also publically linked the Kremlin to Politkovskaya's death while speaking to London's Frontline Club media group last month.

"Somebody has asked me directly, who is guilty of Anna's death? And I can directly answer you: It is Mr. (Vladimir) Putin, president of the Russian Federation." Litvinenko told the group at the Frontline Club media group.

On Wednesday, the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service, the SVR, issued its strongest denial yet that it was involved in any assassination attempt. "Litvinenko is not the kind of person for whose sake we would spoil bilateral relations," SVR spokesman Sergei Ivanov said, according to the Interfax news agency. "It is absolutely not in our interests to be engaged in such activity."

Litvinenko worked both for the KGB and for a successor, the Federal Security Service. In 1998, he publicly accused his superiors of ordering him to kill Russian tycoon Boris Berezovsky _ now exiled in Britain _ and a year later spent nine months in jail on charges of abuse of office, for which he was later acquitted, and which prompted his move to London.

On the day he first felt ill, Litvinenko said he had two meetings. In the morning, he met with an unidentified Russian and with Andrei Lugovoy, a former KGB colleague and bodyguard to one-time Russian Prime Minister Yegor Gaidar at a London hotel. Later, he dined with Italian security expert Mario Scaramella to discuss the October murder of Politkovskaya.

Scaramella told reporters in Rome on Tuesday that he had traveled to meet Litvinenko to discuss an e-mail he received from a source naming the killers of Politkovskaya, who was gunned down Oct. 7 at her Moscow apartment building, and outlining that he and Litvinenko were on a hit list.

Goldfarb said that he had a photocopy of the four-page e-mail and confirmed that it did read like the hit list described by Scaramella.

"What's in there confirms what Scaramella said. It lists several targets for assassination, among them are Politkovskaya, Litvinenko, Scaramella, Berezovsky and others," he said. But he refused to say who compiled the document, saying that it could jeopardize the police investigation into the poisoning.

After visiting the hospital on Thursday, Berezovsky told the AP that British police have yet to speak to him, but hoped they would be in contact over the next two days. The police declined to comment about whether they had the e-mail.

Goldfarb said Wednesday that there was nothing out of the ordinary in Litvinenko's meeting with Lugovoy, who also worked as bodyguard to Berezovsky, the most high profile Russian exile in London.

Litvinenko refused to implicate any of the people he met on the day he said he believed he was poisoned.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

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thallium poisoning isn't high-tech, if anyones read the pale horse by agatha christie, a lot of people are murdered by thallium poisoning. apparently, miss christie already knew of the poisonous effects of consuming thallium.

edit: thats interesting, those are symptoms of thallium poisoning.

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Hmm, it says he had dinner. Was it sushi?

<ahttp://img436.imageshack.us/img436/9710/blowfish9ie.gif />

Poison, poison, tasty fish!

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He was actually poisoned at a Sushi Bar in London...

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jvlm.123 has a point, I think that "certian people" should pay a visit to the sushi resturant and check the cook's credentials.

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Didn't something like this happen before in London? A spy who died of poisoning after he was stabbed in the leg with an umbrella, which had apparently shot a metal pellet full of poison into him?

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Hmm, police and experts have found traces of radiation at the spy's home, a hotel and a sushi bar, all of which he visited the day he fell ill (1 November). They're almost certain that it was polonium-210 that killed him, and they found traces of it in his urine.

More here: http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,70131-13553799,00.html?f=rss

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Well whoever did this certainly knew what they were doing. They gave him enough to kill him, but not to much so they had enough time to escape, this has increased speculation on who is responsible.

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is anyone surprised at this in the least, you don't know if he was taken out by the russians to silence him...he did it himself to prove he was a spy, or even by the west to try and prove the rudssians are still spying (or the tanggled web we weave we try to decieve)

A: he is  a spy,  they get killed occupational hazzrd comes with the territory 

B: he switched sides which makes him a traitor and a liability of any knowledge he has or just could possible have of the former Russian network contacts or their agents still in the field or even knowledge he could have of the western spies he came across at work or their contacts.

C: he went public condeming his former bosses and country. spies are suppose to go public...it's against the spy code and the genral idea of beign a spy

D: did I mention he was a spy

and can you really belive the autopsy results...spy hold gun to doctors head (or blackmails him), BTW write this down as the cause of death.

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Originally posted by: JanYpe Didn't something like this happen before in London? A spy who died of poisoning after he was stabbed in the leg with an umbrella, which had apparently shot a metal pellet full of poison into him?quote>

Yeah. Here's a clip from the NYTimes:

"Mr. Litvinenko’s slow and inexorable death was among the most bizarre since Georgi Markov, a Bulgarian dissident, was murdered in London with a jab from a poison-tipped umbrella in 1978."

The article also says that London is currently on a radiation alert, because traces of polonium 210 were found at the places Litvinenko visited on the day he said he was poisoned. Crazy stuff.

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