Reported suspect in spy poisoning lashes out
Russian denies role, blasts ‘lies, provocation and government propaganda’
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Break in Russian spy's death case? Jan. 26: A news report says British police have cracked the murder-by-poison case of former agent Alexander Litvinenko. NBC's Stephanie Gosk has the details. MSNBC |
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MOSCOW - The man reported by British media to be a suspect in the murder of a former Russian agent in London hit out Saturday at “lies, provocation and government propaganda,” denying any role in the radiation poisoning death of Alexander Litvinenko.
Andrei Lugovoi told The Associated Press that he viewed the reports in Britain’s Guardian newspaper and Sky News that he is a suspect in the murder as an attempt by the British authorities to make up for the lack of evidence against him.
“This is all lies, provocation and government propaganda by the United Kingdom,” he said. “They are trying to make up for their poor hand.”
Sky News reported Friday that British prosecutors believe they have enough evidence to charge Lugovoi.
Investigators have identified the teapot believed to have contained the radioactive tea, which eventually killed Litvinenko in November, Sky News said, citing unnamed Scotland Yard officials.
Speculation
The reports cap a week of media speculation on the direction of the British investigation into the death. The Guardian newspaper also reported Friday that police were focussing on Lugovoi and had sufficient evidence for prosecutors to decide whether to file charges against him, citing unnamed government officials.
Scotland Yard’s investigation has centered on Lugovoi and Dmitry Kovtun, two Russian ex-KGB officers who were present at the Millennium Hotel in London when Litvinenko fell ill on Nov. 1 after contamination from a rare, radioactive substance.
Litvinenko, 43, died on Nov. 23. The former agent fled to Britain after leaving Russia and was granted asylum. In exile, he became a vocal opponent of Russian President Vladimir Putin, accusing him in a deathbed statement of masterminding his death.
Russian officials have denied any involvement in his murder.
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