Skip navigation
advertisement

Spy's contact: I was poisoned for secrets swap

Radiation found in security expert; ex-agent's wife, ex-Russian premier OK

Image: Italian defense analyst Mario Scaramella
Tony Gentile / Reuters file
Italian defense analyst Mario Scaramella met with his contact and former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko at a London restaurant on Nov. 1, the same day Litvinenko fell ill. Scaramella has since tested positive for traces of the same radioactive poison that killed Litvinenko.
NBC VIDEO
Spy mystery deepens
Dec 2: Authorities are still trying to figure who is responsible for the poisoning death of a former Russian spy in London. NBC's Ned Colt reports.

Nightly News

NBC VIDEO
Who's behind poisonings?
Dec. 1: Glenmore Trenear-Harvey, an intelligence analyst and former friend of Alexander Litvinenko, talks with MSNBC's Amy Robach about new reports of the same toxin being found in yet another person.

MSNBC

Europe video  
Russian spacecraft blasts off
  Dec. 20: Astronauts from the United States, Russia and Japan blast off to the International Space Station from Russia's remote space complex in southern Kazakhstan.

Text alerts on msnbc.com

Breaking news alerts (about 1 per day)
Click here to sign up or text NEWS to MSNBC (67622).

Find more alerts at alerts.msnbc.com

  Your weather

Click to see the weather outlook for your destination

msnbc.com news services
updated 12:16 p.m. ET Dec. 3, 2006

LONDON/ROME - An Italian contact of poisoned former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko said he believed both were targeted with a radioactive substance because of secrets they shared.

Mario Scaramella said on Saturday urine tests showed he had received a potentially lethal dose of polonium 210 — the rare radioactive isotope that killed Litvinenko — and "dangerous concentrations" of polonium would stay in his body for months.

"I have reason to believe that the poisoning of myself and Litvinenko may be connected to information that Litvinenko himself, for months, had transmitted to me," Scaramella said in a statement published by Italian media.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

He did not accuse anyone of the poisoning or specify what kind of information Litvinenko had sent him.

Scaramella's dosage of polonium was significantly lower than that of Litvinenko but still considered "potentially lethal and, therefore, capable of killing me," he said.

Litvinenko's mysterious poisoning has sparked a public health scare and strained London's relations with Moscow. From his deathbed, Litvinenko accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of ordering his slow and agonizing death.

The Kremlin denies any involvement and has promised full cooperation with the British investigation. Other theories have centered on the possible involvement of rogue Russian agents.

Feeling well
Scaramella said he felt well and had no symptoms of radiation sickness. But he said he would have to remain under strict medical supervision for months.

He said he was not suspected of killing Litvinenko and London police regarded him as a victim. "I hope to survive to be able to deny all of the defamation, written and spoken, against me," he said.

The London hospital treating Scaramella said he was well and initial tests showed no evidence of radiation sickness.

But Italian Senator Paolo Guzzanti, who spoke to Scaramella by phone, said health officials had told Scaramella the dose of polonium he had received is usually fatal.

"They also said so far, nobody could ever survive this poison, so it is very unlikely he could. But, if he doesn't collapse in three months, there is a kind of hope ... They said that every six months ... the radioactivity decreases by half," he told Reuters.

Scaramella, a KGB expert, met Litvinenko at a London sushi restaurant on Nov. 1, the day the Russian fell ill, to show him e-mails from a source warning their lives might be in danger.

Officials said a female relative of Litvinenko — reported to be his widow, Marina — also had traces of polonium 210 in her urine. They said she was not in short-term danger and any long-term risk was likely to be small.


Sponsored LinksGet listed here
Top Online Schools
Find the perfect online school and Boost your Career! Free Info Pack.
www.EarnMyDegree.com

Sponsored links

Resource guide