Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Expert in Russian poisoning case is shot

FBI joins investigation, but officials think it’s just local crime

Dateline NBC
Paul Joyal
Interactive
Investigate for yourself
Examine the curious details of the case.
  Stand and be counted
Gut Check America

What keeps you up at night? Gut Check America wants you to tell us what really matters to our country. Click here to learn more and get involved.

  Photo features  
  More
Image: Bee on flower
Zuma Press
  The Week in Pictures
A bird, a  bee, and a Spanish kiss highlight a week of images from around the world.
Image: Peruvian inmates
Reuters
PhotoBlog
View and discuss the pictures and issues that caught our eyes.
By Pete Williams
Justice correspondent
NBC News
updated 1:45 a.m. ET March 3, 2007

Pete Williams
Justice correspondent

WASHINGTON - FBI agents say they are assisting police in suburban Washington who are investigating the shooting of a Russian expert — a man who spoke out on "Dateline NBC" last weekend and strongly suggested that remnants of the KGB were responsible for the bizarre poisoning death of Alexander Litvinenko.

The Russian expert, Paul Joyal, was shot Thursday night as he got out of his car in front of his house in Adelphi, Md. Investigators in Prince Georges County say a witness claims to have seen two men running away after the shooting. Joyal remains hospitalized with a gunshot wound to the midsection. Authorities have not said whether they've been able to talk to him.

Joyal is a long-time consultant on security and Russian affairs. From 1980 to 1989, he was director of security for the Senate Intelligence Committee.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement

On last weekend's "Dateline," he said of Litvenenko's death: "A message has been communicated to anyone who wants to speak out against the Kremlin: 'If you do, no matter who you are, where you are, we will find you and we will silence you — in the most horrible way possible.'"

  Click for related content

The shooting has certainly raised eyebrows, because Maryland police are well aware of Joyal's views regarding the Litvinenko death. But at this point, they have no evidence suggesting the shooting was anything other than an example of the rising crime rate in Washington's Maryland suburbs. Local investigators are highly skeptical that his shooting was anything other than street crime.

FREE VIDEO
Polonium-210
Feb. 28: London's Dana Center focuses on radioactive isotope polonium-210, blamed for the poisoning death of Alexander Litvinenko. NBC's Chapman Bell reports.

NBC News Web Extra

In an odd twist, another person who appeared on the "Dateline" broadcast died of a heart attack last month. Reporter Daniel McGrory of the Times of London, who has written about the Litvinenko case, died Feb. 20, before the "Dateline" segment was broadcast. He was 54.

His family said he "died suddenly at home." He was a veteran British foreign correspondent who had reported from several war zones. Just before his death, he had been reporting in Pakistan.

© 2008 MSNBC Interactive

Sponsored links

Resource guide

Get Your 2008 Credit Score

Search Jobs

Find your next car

Find Your Dream Home

Find a business to start

$7 trades, no fee IRAs