Showing posts with label Lugovoi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lugovoi. Show all posts

May 28, 2007

Current Headlines 12 of 12

There is a great deal of intrigue, speculation and facts in the media. In this post, I will try to provide a characterization of this work, research and opinion.

Lugovoy Accuses MI6, Berezovsky, Russian Mafia of Poisoning Alexander Litvinenko Charles Ganske, Real Russia Project, revisits the Andrei Lugovoi interview, and provides links to support some of the accusations.

Police Seize Drafts of Books on Putin Douglas Birch, Breibart, reported that Russian journalist, Vladimir Pribylovsky, said law enforcement officials searched his apartment and carted off computers that contained draft chapters of two books he was writing about President Vladimir Putin. Pribylovsky has been working with Yuri Felshtinsky, a historian and author living in the United States. The working titles for the books are "Putin's Comrades," and "Operation Successor." Felshtinsky co-authored a book, "Blowing Up Russia," with Alexander Litvinenko.

Lavrov Says Britain Politicizing Litvinenko Case, HULIQ is quoting Russia's Foreign Minister, Sergey Lavrov, as saying that "instead of a professional inquiry, we're seeing an attempt to turn the criminal case into some sort of a political campaign."

Russia says Litvinenko visited Chechnya to kill for Berezovsky
Russian News & Information Agency NOVOSIT quotes a senior Russian official, who said there is strong evidence that Alexander Litvinenko visited Chechnya to eliminate witnesses linking tycoon Boris Berezovsky to terrorist warlord Shamil Basayev.

British secret service involved in Litvinenko killing, says suspect The Times Online, Nico Hine's article provides links to multimedia, background and related links on the latest Lugovoi interview, including Richard Beeston's Times Online article, Claim by Claim: Lugovoy's Theories examined.

Britain Rejects Chaika's Lugovoi Offer Jim Heintz, in The Moscow Times reports that Russian Prosecutor General Yury Chaika's offer to prosecute Andrei Lugovoi in Russia, was rejected by British Attorney General Lord Goldsmith.

Litvinenko `Rebellion' Poses Awkward Questions: Cannes Roundup Bloomberg film critic, Iain Millar, writes that filmmaker Andrey Nekrasov made a powerful and incendiary intervention on behalf of his late friend Alexander Litvinenko, when his documentary "Rebellion: The Litvinenko Case" screened yesterday at the 60th Cannes Film Festival.

Litvinenko film maker's Finland home burgled Reuters reports on a break-in at the Finnish holiday home of Russian movie director Andrei Nekrasov, whose documentary on murdered Russian exile Alexander Litvinenko was shown at Cannes film festival.

Russia and the rule of law: Poisoning case underscores Europe's doubts International Herald Tribune's Steven Lee Myers writes an excellent essay on Vladimir Putin's Russia. If recent history is any guide, Russia will not fare well, and the consequences could be profound, deepening the political, diplomatic and social rift between Russia and its European neighbors. In proceeding after proceeding, Russia's actions have withered under the scrutiny of international justice. As a result, the very concepts of law and justice have become touchstones for larger fears about how Putin amasses and uses power, and whether he is returning Russia to habits that brought Europe grief in the past.

The amorality of the Putin regime, Jim Hoagland, Washington Post Writers Group, writes that Russia's refusal to extradite the prime suspect in the polonium poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko in London last November reveals the essential amorality of the Putin regime and its false narrative of recent history.

I Spied for Britan But You Have Abandonded Me David Paul, Daily Express, reports that the fugitive, former KGB double agent in hiding, in Britain, Victor Makarov, tells how he fears being the next target for assassins who poisoned defector Alexander Litvinenko.

Death of a dissident: Moscow's murky assassins Diplomatic Editor Anne Penketh, Daily Independent, reminds us that Russia's sinister spies are back in the spotlight, but suggests that they never really left us.

April 22, 2007

Arrest Warrants for Andrei Lugovoi, Dmitri Kovtun and Vyacheslav Sokolenko

Britain to arrest ex-KGB agents - murderers AXIS Information and Analysis is reporting that Scotland Yard detectives are expected to issue arrest warrants against three former KGB officers suspected of poisoning ex-Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko. Warrants are expected to be issued against Andrei Lugovoy, Dmitri Kovtun and Vyacheslav Sokolenko within the next few weeks.

Andrei Lugovoi a former Federal Security Service of Russia (FSB) operative and millionaire who met with Alexander Litvinenko on the day he fell ill (1 November). He had visited London at least three times in the month before Litvinenko's death and met with the victim four times. In 1987 Lugovoi joined the KGB's 9th directorate which provided security for top state officials. He was a platoon commander for five years and then served as a commander in the Kremlin regiment's training company. In 1991 he was transferred to the personal security unit until his resignation at the end of 1996. During his time in the KGB he provided security for Prime Minister Yegor Gaidar, the head of the presidential administration Sergey Filatov and Foreign Minister Andrey Kozyrev. Lugovoi went on to work in the private security business. For several years he was head of security at the private television company ORT, then owned by Boris Berezovsky and Badri Patarkatsishvili. In 2001 Lugovoi was arrested and charged with organizing the escape of Nikolai Glushkov, a former deputy director-general of Aeroflot arrested in 2000 on fraud charges. Lugovoi's company Pershin is involved in private security, soft drinks and wine, and is said to be worth £100 million.

Dmitri Kovtun a Russian businessman, business partner with Andrei Lugovoy, and ex-KGB agent, met Alexander Litvinenko several times in London, the last time hours before Litvinenko fell ill. Kovtun graduated from military school in 1985, before graduating in 1986 with Andrei Lugovoy, from the prestigious army college, the Moscow Command School. Lugovoy recalled that the two of them had grown up in the same apartment block from the age of 12, while their fathers served in the Soviet Ministry of Defence. Kovtun spent the rest of the 1980s serving in Czechoslovakia and then Germany. Following the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, he remained in Germany, living there for a total of 12 years. He married a German national, although they are now separated. He retains a German residence permit, although he no longer conducts any business in Germany. He now works in consulting, helping Western companies to access Russian markets. It was for this reason, he explained, that he was interested in meeting Litvinenko, who had “serious contacts with serious English companies” interested in operating in Russia. Kovtun confirmed that he had first been introduced to Litvinenko by Lugovoy on 16 October.

Vyacheslav Sokolenko, another business partner of Andrei Lugovoy and Dimitri Kovtun. Sokolenko works for Devyatyy Val (Ninth Wave), a group of private security firms based in Moscow. Dmitri Kovtun also works for Devyatyy Val, and with Sokolenko, run the company.

A Russian-language website bearing the name of Devyatyy Val reveals the group’s slogan as “Spirit of Perfection”. The group comprises three security firms: Stolitsa-Shchit (Capital Shield), Garde-Iks and Orion, as well as the Lentus consultancy and a training facility. The website says the company was founded in 1993. Devyatyy Val is also a member of a Moscow-based association of private security firms, Devyatichi (Men of the Ninth). The association takes its name from the KGB’s ninth department, which protected top Communist Party officials during the Soviet era. Lugovoy served in this unit from 1987 until the fall of the Soviet Union.

Is Vyacheslav Sokolenko the answer to the question, "Who is Vladimir?" Is Vladimir actually Vyacheslav(aka Volodya )? (1) Vladimir was described as a “tall, taciturn sharp-featured Russian in his early forties”. (2) Vladimir accompanied Andrei Lugovoy to the hotel. (3) Litvinenko told officers that he was suspicious of “Vladimir”. (4) Vladimir was careful to disclose nothing about his identity or why he had turned up at a private get-together. (5) Vladimir apparently pressed Litvinenko to join him in a cup of tea. (6) Vladimir said little during the brief meeting.

January 22, 2007

Polonium-210 Levels - Update on Who is Contaminated

Category 1 [Updated March 8, 2007]
* 592 people had results ‘below reporting level' - below 30 millibecquerels (mBq) per day (natural levels of Po-210 in urine are typically in the range 5-15 mBq per day). It is therefore unlikely that any of these people had been exposed to Po-210

Category 2
* 85 people had results above 30 mBq per day in their urine, but with a dose less than 1mSv indicating no public health risk, and no health concern to the individual, but probable contact with Po-210

Category 3a
* 35 people had results above 1 millisievert (mSv), but below 6mSv indicating no public health risk, and no health concern to the individual, but probable contact with Po-210

There are 712 results in categories 1, 2 and 3a and these are NOT of health concern.

Category 3b
* 17 people had results above 6mSv which are not significant enough to result in any illness in the short term and any increased risk in the long term is likely to be very small.

Elevated Levels Polonium-210
1. Alexander Litvinenko, 2-10 millionths of a gram, that is 50-200 times the theoretical lethal dose of 50 billionths of a gram.
2. Dmitri Kovtun (hospitalized more than 1 month)
3. Andrei Lugovoi (hospitalized 3 weeks)
4. Mario Scaramella, got up to 250 billionths of a gram, five times the lethal dose
5. Marina Litvinenko
6. Dmitri Kovtun’s ex-wife (Hamburg, Germany)
7. Seven staff from the Pine Bar, The Millennium Hotel London Mayfair
8. 3-guests at the Pine Bar, The Millennium Hotel London Mayfair
9. 1-staff member at Sheraton Hotel Park Lane
10.1-staff member at the Best Western Hotel, Piccadilly

Executive Overview: Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Defense

Positive polonium test on guest

Litvinenko Investigators Say Two More Exposed to Radiation

Update on public health issues related to Polonium-210 investigation

Assessments of Doses from Measurements of Poloniuum-210 in Urine

What is Polonium-210?

December 17, 2006

Photographs 2 of 4

Here are photographs of names that keep coming up in the investigation of Alexander Litvinenko's murder, or victims of previous poisonings and suspicious deaths. To read the biographies of these individuals, click on their names.

Artyom Borovik A prominent Russian journalist and media magnate who specialized in investigative exposes of the Kremlin was killed in a suspicious air crash at Moscow airport (March 10, 2000). Borovik was one of the loudest critics in Moscow of President Vladimir Putin, and of Mr. Putin's war against Chechnya. Borovik's publications included Sovershenno Sekretno (Top Secret) and Versiya, which "concentrated on juicy revelations of the venality and the corruption among Russia's rich and powerful. He also helped CBS "60 Minutes" produce a segment on Russia's strategic missile force.


Oleg Gordiewski Born-1938, Moscow. Former KGB colonel and Colonel of the KGB and KGB Resident-designate and Bureau chief in London. He was a double agent for M16 since 1966, when he was persuaded to work for the Danish intelligence service soon after the KGB posted him to Copenhagen posing as a press attaché. In 1985 he became highest ranking officer to defect, having served as head of the KGB in London in charge of the USSR's whole spy operation in Britain.





Vladimir Kostov Born Bulgaria. He survived an assassination attempt, was shot in the back with a poison bullet, near the Arc the Triumph in Paris, after fleeing Bulgaria in 1977. Bulgarian Dictator Schiwkov blamed dissident Georgi Markov for assisting Kostov escape Bulgaria. Markov was later stabbed in London, with an umbrella, which injected the same kind of poisoned bullet in his leg, from which he died. It was alleged that the Bulgarian secret police, in collaboration with KGB Officer Oleg Kalugin, carried out the assassination.



Andrei Kozlov Born-1965, The top deputy chairman of Russia's Central Bank was murdered (September 2006), execution style, after being shot by unidentified assailants in an attack that officials suggested was prompted by his efforts to clean up the country's banking system. Kozlov's most conspicuous achievement had been the introduction of a deposit insurance program designed to restore faith in the banking system after widespread defaults in 1998. Kozlov had been responsible for banking supervision, and had overseen an ambitious program to reduce criminality and money laundering in the banking system.


Andrei Lugovoi
Former KGB agent and bodyguard for Boris Berezovsky. Met Alexander Litvinenko on November 1, 2006 at Millennium Hotel-London. Lugovi, who had once been arrested for assisting Berezovsky ally Nikolai Glushkov in an alleged escape attempt from police custody, "where he was being held on charges of embezzlement (to the tune of $250 million) and massive fraud,". Lugovi was later released; Glushkov was tried and convicted on lesser charges of financial chicanery related to the case and served three years in prison. Lugovi meanwhile has apparently become a successful private detective in Moscow. In recent days, Berezovsky has begun hinting heavily that his former friend Lugovi has been restored to the good graces of the Russian security organs and thus might have had a hand in Litvinenko's poisoning. How else to explain his booming business? "Anyone close to me can normally not even find work in Moscow, let alone have a successful business," Berezovsky told the Moscow Time.

Salman Raduev Born 1967-Russia, was a rogue Chechen warlord. During the First Chechen War, he became a field commander for the separatist Chechen forces. Raduyev was one of the best known of the rebel field commanders. In March 1996 Raduyev was shot in the head. Raduyev was wounded again in a car bomb assination attempt in 1998. This earned him the nickname of Titanic because his shattered skull was reconstructed with steel plates. Because of his injury, Raduyev did not take an active role in the Second Chechen war. He was captured in March 2000 by the Russian special operations unit Vympel. Raduyev was tried on multiple murder charges and, in 2001, was sentenced to life in prison. Raduyev died in prison from internal bleeding. The circumstances surrounding the 2002 death of Raduyev are not clear, poisoning was suspected.


Yuri Shchekochikhin Born-1950 Kirovabad Russia, Journalist Novaya Gazeta. Shchekochikhin made his name writing about and campaigning against the influence of organized crime and corruption in the Russian government. He died suddenly in 2003 after a mysterious illness later linked to thallium poisoning, in what was believed by many to be a politically-motivated assassination.


Yuri Shvets A Major in the KGB during the years 1980-1990, working for 2-years in the US at their Washington Rezidentura. Shvets recruited two key sources of political intelligence whom he referred to as Sputnitsa and Socrates. Sputnitsa has been identified as the late New Statesman journalist Claudia Wright. Socrates, a former Carter administration aide with strong ties to Greece was not identified by Shvets. However, in his book "Spy Handler: Memoir of a KGB Officer", Victor Cherkashin names "Socrates" as John Helmer. After publishing a book describing his exploits and ultimate falling out with the KGB, Shvets was banned from foreign travel. In 1994, he secretly made his way to America where he now resides. Shvets is now a key witness in the poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko. Shvets said that he and Litvinenko had compiled a report investigating the activities of senior Kremlin officials on behalf of a British company looking to invest "dozens of millions of dollars" in a project in Russia. Shvets said the dossier was so incriminating about one senior Kremlin official, who was not named. It was likely that Litvinenko was murdered in revenge. He alleged that Litvinenko had shown the dossier to another business associate, Andrei Lugovoi, who had worked for the KGB and later the FSB. Shvets alleged that Lugovoi was still an FSB informant and he had passed the dossier to members of the spy service.


Vyacheslav Volodya Sokolenko Born-1964, Sokolenko, a business partner of Andrei Lugovi, met Alexander Litvinenko on November 1, 2006 at Millennium Hotel-London. London police have been looking for a suspect in the Litvinenko murder investigation, named Vladimir, described as a figure that was "tall" and "taciturn". Sokolenko matches the description. He heads an association of security agencies.

Galina Starovoitova Born-1946, Chelyabinsk, Russia. On November 20, 1998, Starovoitova and her aide, Ruslan Linkov, were assassinated in the staircase of her apartment building. Starovoitova was an impassioned human rights activist, feminist and democratic progressive in the Russian parliament. She was co-chair of the Democratic Russia party.


Julia Svetlichnaja Svetlichnaja met Alexander Litvinenko earlier this year, and received more than 100 emails from him. In a series of interviews, she reveals that the former Russian secret agent had documents from the FSB, the Russian agency formerly known as the KGB. He had asked Svetlichnaja, who is based in London, to enter into a business deal with him and 'make money'. The FBI has been dragged into the investigation of Alexander Litvinenko's death after details emerged that he had planned to make tens of thousands of pounds blackmailing senior Russian spies and business figures.


Colonel Velentin Velichko Leads the group accused of planning the assassination of Alexander Litvinenko, the former Russian spy, and the Italian investigator Mario Scaramella. A memo, handed to Litvinenko by Scaramella at the Itsu restaurant in Piccadilly on the day he was poisoned, alleged that both men were being targeted. The memo claimed that agents of the Russian security services and an organization called, Dignity and Honour, run by a Colonel Velentin Velichko, were trying to kill the "enemy No 1 of Russia" and his "companion in arms", exiled billionaire Boris Berezovsky and Alexander Litvinenko. The memo handed to Litvinenko was written by Evgueni Limarev, whose father served with the KGB in the 1970s and who now lives in Switzerland, specialising in researching such groups. The memo adds: "Velichko's agents are presumably involved in the assassination of Anna Politkovskaya in October 2006, as well as in elaboration of other similar assassination plans, by order and on behalf of FSB/SVR."



Zelimkhan Yandarbiev Former Chechen President died from injuries he sustained in an explosion in Qatar (February 2004). Yandarbiev, Chechnya's acting president in 1996 and 1997, was wanted by Russia on charges of leading an armed revolt. He lived in exile in Qatar. The United Nations last year put Yandarbiev on a list of people with alleged links to the Al-Qaeda terrorist network.


Sergei Yushenkov Born-1950, he was a liberal Russian politician well known for his uncompromising struggle for democracy, rapid free market economic reforms, and higher human rights standards in Russia. He was assassinated in 2003, just hours after registering his political party to participate in the parliamentary elections. Various theories exist regarding his assassination, including one that Boris Berezovsky suggested to Sergei Yushenkov that an attempt on his life should be faked: to promote Liberal Russia, a party that was little known at that time. Before Golovliov died in August 2002, he might have passed Yushenkov certain compromising materials concerning ranking officials involved in privatization frauds in the Ural area.