Thread Rating:
  • 1 Vote(s) - 5 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Something is cooking...
#1
I read this story this morning and boy did it make a few alarms go off. 

I may be overthinking this, and if I am, this is the right place to post it  tinycool

CDC Employee goes missing

Quote:(ATLANTA) — Police in Atlanta say a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention employee has been missing for more than a week.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported Thursday that 35-year-old Timothy Jerrell Cunningham was last seen Feb. 12. Police said he called in sick from work that day and hasn’t been heard from since.

WSB-TV reported his parents arrived from Maryland at his Atlanta home and found his car, keys, wallet and phone. They said he also left his dog at home.
His father Terrell Cunningham told the television station that his son graduated from Morehouse and got a master’s degree and doctorate from Harvard University. He worked as an epidemic intelligence officer and has been deployed for public health emergencies.
Anyone with information on his whereabouts was asked to call Atlanta police.


There doesn't seem to be much there, but after reading a few other sites I have a bad feeling. Not the "he's kidnapped and / or dead" felling either. 

CDC Commander missing for 12 days now

Quote:The bright and talented young man studied at Harvard and is a commander at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. He left work feeling sick, and hasn’t been seen since. His family has said that certain communications they had with him before he disappeared left them worried. But no matter what was happening, he would never abandon his beloved dog, a job he loved, or his friends and loved one, they said.


and this nugget:

Quote:He is a commander in the US Health Service Corps, his family said, and as part of his job is sent to respond to public health emergencies like the Zika virus, the Ebola virus, or natural disasters, ABC reportedAccording to his CDC bio, he’s a team lead with the CDC’s Division of Population Health and trained with the CDC as an Epidemic Intelligence Service officer. His family said he was recently promoted to Commander, 11 Alive reported.


So we have a commander at the CDC who is in charge of responding to emergencies like Zika, Ebola, etc., and he just up and disappears. His family wouldn't say what was "alarming" in their conversations with him prior to his disappearance, but something was clearly off (according to them). 

If this doesn't make the gears start turning then I don't know what does. 

Maybe he wasn't feeling well because he got infected by something? 

Maybe somebody took him (or used him) for some twisted game of "(capture the) false flag"? 


[Image: cunningham_1_ht_er_180222_v4x3_4x3_992.jpg]

No matter what it is, it's scary and sad all around. I hope he is found and this entire situation can be explained and understood. Every day he stays missing the hope of a happy outcome starts to dwindle.  tinycrying 

And every day without answers we are left alone in our "dark" thoughts of a massive conspiracy in the works for some ungodly reason. Or is that just me?  tinybighuh
#2
I can see three possibilitys.

1. Promoted above his ability to do the job and cracked under the pressure

2. Has stolen something " nasty" to sell or use.

3. Has run off with his lover.
#3
Its #2 that stinks to high heaven... wait, let me rephrase that  tinylaughing

It's the second one that scares me to death. Whether he was threatened, bought, etc., and by who, that's the one that first popped in my head this morning.
#4
I'm with you on this one; red flags going up all around this story.

Not enough to go on yet, so I guess we'll have to wait for more to come out, if it ever does.   tinyshocked
#5
After 12 days,,,,, I'd say he was Kidnapped and then Disposed of when he did or didn't cooperate with the Bad Guys.
Once A Rogue, Always A Rogue!
[Image: attachment.php?aid=936]
#6
They will find his body, it will have something to do with a location in the movie Green Mile. 

His dog was named Bojangles. I had a very weird episode today laughing out loud at the scene where the old Tom Hanks shows the lady "Mr. Jangles" at like 60 years old. Then I read this: Something isn't right

How in the hell am I thinking about Mr. Jangles in the middle of my hectic day, only to read this before bed... tinybighuh
#7
"Goosebumps"

So here I am, writing about business meeting "ice breakers" for my homework today, and I turn on the TV for some background noise (kids are being loud in the other room)

What's on TV? The fucking "Green Mile" just started. 

tinybighuh tinybighuh tinybighuh tinybighuh tinybighuh tinybighuh tinybighuh tinybighuh tinybighuh tinybighuh tinybighuh tinybighuh tinybighuh tinybighuh tinybighuh tinybighuh tinybighuh tinysurprised tinysurprised tinysurprised tinysurprised tinysurprised tinysurprised tinysurprised tinysurprised tinysurprised tinysurprised
#8
Sounds like this guy knew he was about to take a trip... a looooong trip. 

Is he helping develop something, or was he running for his life?  That's the question.



Quote:The day before mysteriously disappearingCenter for Disease Control and Prevention scientist, Tim Cunningham, told a neighbor to tell his wife to delete his phone number from her cell phone, reports WHAS 11

Cunningham vanished February 12th after meeting with his supervisor, who explained to him why he was passed over for a promotion.

Atlanta Police Major Michael O’Connor released new details of Tim Cunningham’s disappearance in a news conference on Tuesday.

On the way home, Cunningham tried to call his mother in Maryland. She missed the call, and Cunningham did not leave a voicemail, Atlanta Police Major Michael O’Connor said Cunningham hasn’t been heard from since.

Cunningham’s parents drove from Maryland to their son’s Atlanta home when they had trouble getting in contact with him. They said that two windows at Cunningham’s house were open: one to a bathroom and one to a laundry room. They said that was unusual because Cunningham was environmentally friendly.

Police did confirm that Cunningham told a neighbor to tell his wife to erase his phone number from her phone on the day before he disappeared. O’Connor said they’d talked to that neighbor but offered no other details about what that exchange might have meant.

In a bizarre twist, police managed to locate Cunningham’s cell phone, car keys and wallet at his home.
“Every single belonging that we are aware was located in that residence,” O’Connor said.

Asked if foul play could have been involved, O’Connor said, “There’s no evidence suggesting anything,”

When reporters pressed for more details, O’Connor responded, “There is a lot that I cannot explain.”

Cunningham’s family and friends have raised more than $22,000 as a reward to help locate the missing CDC scientist.
#9
With thanks to Mystic Wanderer.

Quote:Nationwide manhunt underway for missing CDC worker; Ebola containment aircraft
dispatched to Little Rock then back to Atlanta.

Is there any connection between the missing CDC public health commander and the
Ebola containment aircraft recently deployed to Arkansas?

[Image: attachment.php?aid=3332]

'ATLANTA (INTELLIHUB) — A nationwide manhunt is now underway for missing Center
For Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Public Health Service Commander Timothy
Cunningham, 35, who was last seen on Feb 12 after he cut his workday short and told a
neighbor of his to have the neighbor’s wife erase his phone number from her contact list.

Records show the rock star epidemiologist, who had previously responded to several
major Ebola virus and Zika outbreaks, worked on Feb. 5th, 6th, and 7th (a Monday,
Tuesday, and Wednesday) before calling in sick on Feb. 8th, and 9th (Thursday, and Friday).

Cunningham reportedly returned to work on the following Monday, Feb. 12, where subsequently
left early after telling co-workers he felt ill; this would be the last time Cunningham was spotted.

The Public Health Service commander called and had a conversation with his sister around 9 a.m.
on the morning of his disappearance and even tried to reach out to his mother via telephone shortly
after but was not successful, reports say.

The family of Mr. Cunningham and Crime Stoppers of Atlanta have put up a $10,000 reward for
information leading to an arrest and indictment in the case, although no evidence of foul play exists,
WSB-TV 2 reports.

A GoFundMe page set up on Timothy Cunningham’s behalf has raised just over $24,000 of the
$100,000 stated goal at the time of this article’s publication.

An excerpt from the page reads:
"Dr. Timothy Cunningham has been missing from his home in North West Atlanta, Georgia,
since February 12, 2018. Tim is a very loving, brilliant, and responsible young man.
Therefore, his sudden disappearance is highly irregular and very much out of character
for him.
His friends, family, and colleagues are desperately searching for him.
We are launching this fundraising campaign to collect funds that will be used to establish a
reward for information that will help locate Tim. Your contributions will be greatly appreciated."

The search has turned up no new leads, as of yet...'
SOURCE:


Attached Files Thumbnail(s)
   
Edith Head Gives Good Wardrobe. 
#10
I've let this one run it's course in order to see where the media are with this incident, but it
seems the information is slow. So I thought I'd put it here because of a possible vague
connection that the material used may be a nerve agent.

It could even be connected to the subject Mystic Wanderer is dealing with.

Quote:Russian spy: Police seek to identify nerve agent source. [UK]

'Counter-terrorism officers are working to uncover the origin of the nerve agent used in the attempted
murder of ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, in Salisbury.
The pair are still critically ill after being found on a bench in Salisbury.

[Image: attachment.php?aid=3342]


A police officer, who was in intensive care, is now "engaging and talking with people" but the situation
is still serious, the home secretary says. Amber Rudd said there was "nothing soft" about the UK's response.

She told Radio 4's Today: "Let me be clear, we are absolutely robust about any crimes committed on these
streets of the UK." Police said government scientists had identified the nerve agent used, but would not make
that information public at this stage.

The source familiar with the investigation told the BBC it was likely to be rarer than the Sarin gas thought to
have been used in Syria and in an attack on the Tokyo subway in 1995.
And it was said not to be VX - the nerve agent used to kill the half brother of the North Korean leader Kim Jong-un
in Malaysia last year.

Col Skripal, 66, was convicted of passing secrets to MI6 but given refuge in the UK in 2010 as part of a "spy swap".
It is known that he and his 33-year-old daughter had visited the Bishop's Mill pub and Zizzi restaurant in Salisbury
before they were found collapsed on a bench near the Maltings shopping centre.

A witness, who saw the pair at the restaurant, told the BBC Mr Skripal was acting "very strange" and was "very agitated".
"He seemed to lose his temper... and he just started screaming at the top of his voice, he wanted his bill and he wanted
to go."

Police have yet to say if they know how and where the poison was administered.
Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley said: "This is being treated as a major incident involving attempted murder,
by administration of a nerve agent.

"Having established that a nerve agent is the cause of the symptoms... I can also confirm that we believe that the two
people who became unwell were targeted specifically."

He added: "Our role now of course is to establish who is behind this and why they carried out this act."
Nerve agents are highly toxic chemicals that stop the nervous system working and shut down bodily functions.
They normally enter the body through the mouth or nose, but can also be absorbed through the eyes or skin.

Mr Rowley said there was no evidence of a widespread health risk to the public.
Police said they wanted to speak to anyone who was in the centre of Salisbury on Sunday afternoon.
They are particularly keen to hear from people who ate at Zizzi or drank in the Bishop's Mill pub between
13:00 and 16:00 GMT. Both sites remain closed to the public.
There is also a cordon in place outside Mr Skripal's Salisbury home and part of a business park in nearby Amesbury.

Hundreds of detectives, forensic officers, analysts and intelligence officers are working on the case, which has drawn
comparison with the killing of Russian dissident Alexander Litvinenko with radioactive polonium-210 in London in 2006.
A public inquiry concluded his death was probably carried out with the approval of President Putin.

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson told MPs on Tuesday that the UK would respond "robustly" to any evidence of Russian
"state responsibility" in the Skripal case. Russia has insisted it has "no information" about what could have led to the
incident, but is open to co-operating with British police if requested.
Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said foreign media had used the case as part of an anti-Russian
campaign.

"Who is Sergei Skripal?
Col Skripal, 66, had been living in Salisbury after being released by Russia in 2010
Colonel Skripal is a retired Russian military intelligence officer who was jailed for 13
years by Russia in 2006.

[Image: attachment.php?aid=3343]


He was convicted of passing the identities of Russian intelligence agents working
undercover in Europe to the UK's Secret Intelligence Service, MI6.

In July 2010, he was one of four prisoners released by Moscow in exchange for 10
Russian spies arrested by the FBI.

After a Cold War-style spy swap at Austria's Vienna airport, Col Skripal moved to
Salisbury, where he kept a low profile for eight years...'
BBC:


Attached Files Thumbnail(s)
       
Edith Head Gives Good Wardrobe. 
#11
Thank you @"BIAD".  That name looks familiar.  I think I've seen it pop up in some cross reference research articles.

We'll see where this goes.
#12
Caveat: I am not a Ukrainian Troll, nor do I take monies from someone in a thick coat, wooly ushanka hat and enjoys vodka.
The posting below -I believe, is something to do with DFC's thread about Timothy Jerrell Cunningham going missing.
It doesn't make sense on the face of it, but just as DuckForCover commented, it did make alarm bells go off.

As the UK's sabre-rattling at Russia continues in the wake of the former Russian ex-double-spy, his daughter and a Police Officer falling foul
to a 'newcomer' nerve-agent, one has to wonder what ever happened to being innocent until proven guilty?

The poison is reported to have been developed in Russia, the media-friendly title 'Novichok' is bandied about as if it's the single cause and
yet it's really a heading for numerous set of nerve agents that become known in the west around the late 70's and 80's.
So let's put a thumbs-down next to Russia's name for that one.

Sergei Skripal was a Soviet spy who also worked for the United Kingdom's MI6 until those pesky Ruskies discovered his double-wage
earnings and decided that this sort of espionage just wasn't cricket. In 2004, the Federal Security Service arrested him, tried and convicted
him of high treason in 2006, then imprisoned him until a spy-swap with the Brits took place shortly after.

It's alleged he was responsible for blowing the cover of 300 Russian agents.
So Mr. Skripal is Russian and another thumbs-down there, then.
The trust-thing cannot be evaluated because it depends which side of the fence you sit!

In 2011, Sergei Skripal was settled into a small semi-detached abode in the fairly middle-class English town of Salisbury in Wiltshire County.
He had continued to provide information to 'Western intelligence agencies' after his 2010 release and was even pardoned by the then President
of Russia, Dmitry Medvedev. Sergei Skripal's wife died in 2012 and was interred in a Salisbury cemetery, along with a forty-three year-old son
who mysteriously died during a trip to St. Petersburg.

Almost seven years later -during a visit from his daughter who'd been working in Russia, Sergei Skripal and Yulia -his daughter, decided to
drive into Salisbury town and eventually take a meal at a local restaurant.

A BBC timeline:
*Yulia Skripal flew into London's Heathrow Airport on a flight from Russia at about 14:40 GMT on 3 March.
*On 4 March, at about 13:40 GMT, Mr Skripal and his daughter arrived at the Sainbury's upper level car park in Salisbury city centre.
*Police said the pair went to the Bishop's Mill pub before going to Zizzi restaurant at 14:20 GMT, staying until 15:35 GMT.
*At 16:15 GMT emergency services received the first report of an incident.
*Police found the pair on a bench outside Zizzi restaurant in an "extremely serious condition".
*A police officer who fell ill after attending the incident - Det Sgt Nick Bailey - was also taken to hospital and remains in a serious condition.

*Of the 38 people who have been seen in hospital in relation to the incident, 34 have been discharged.
*Only Mr Skripal, his daughter Yulia and Det Sgt Bailey remain in hospital.
*One person is being monitored as an outpatient but is not showing any signs of exposure.

Here's the link to a BBC article that lays out the whole current situation. The only odd-part is that nobody has definitively said there's a
Russian involved. They speculate it was an attempted Russian assassination of someone who hasn't been involved in espionage for over
a decade, but there's no actual fleeing would-be killer.

The UK Government won't let the Russians have a sample of what they've found or see the specifics of their findings.
The same UK gets the majority of it's 'steam' coal from Russia for use in generating electricity and this kind of hostility could certainly switch
off  the lights all over the country that's known for its terrible [electrified] rail-service and it's Government-funded news outlet!

If there was only another country that was reopening coal mines...? Someone we could trade with on a better level after Brexit?
Oh well.

Now since the latest House Draft Report cleared Trump of any Russian collusion and it looks like those Troll Farms in the Ukraine (not Russia!)
have been ripping the p*ss out of everyone in American politics, one has to wonder if the 'Jolly-Good-Show'-Brits are being asked to manifest
a crime to blame Putin with.

I could be wrong, it could be that after Great Britain expels 23 Russian diplomats from it's country as a sign of defiance, the evidence that could
bring a second Cold War could be shown for all to see. But there's a smell here that isn't pickled herring or the out-house of a far-off Gulag, it's
something DFC got a whiff of too.

By the way, the expultions heavily involves visas to Britain, so the status of 'diplomat' -as we the public perceive it, probably won't be effected.

Timothy Cunningham is no grunt, The New Post says he was upset by a promotion snub. This young man is a Commander at the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention and is missing. An alleged Russian-created poison of unknown form is somehow used to infect a has-been
spy in a busy town centre far from Cunningham's last known location.

The accused are not allowed to examine the evidence and the specifics of the assumed nerve agent is still vague to all.
The Financial Times reports that Britain’s defence science and technology laboratory at Porton Down gets an additional £48 million boost
after the Skripal incident.

A web being formed?

Lives aren't important on the chessboard, but steel tariff-exemptions and a bite at the space-industry apple are.
Especially when you're a country struggling from the grasp of a union of local countries and want to 'firm-up' a supposed 'special relationship'
with someone across the Atlantic.

To some of the old dogs in the US military-politic, going back to a Cold War would seem better and maybe it's a facet of dowsing the extremism
that's wandering the globe. Sanctions are old-hat and when the new one proclaiming 'MAGA' is waved for all the world to see, those hats are
better noticed when they are distinct, like black and white for instance.

Senator John McCain and a chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said in a statement on March 13 that:
'...“whether in the shadow of the Kremlin or in a peaceful town in the English countryside, Vladimir Putin will not hesitate to
engage in state-sponsored assassination and endanger the lives of innocent bystanders.
He must not be allowed to treat the United Kingdom or any other nation as a venue for political murder.”...'
SOURCE:

Now... what would you do to get your own way?
Edith Head Gives Good Wardrobe. 
#13
So did the Russians do it ????. Well if people take a good close look at what MI5 did in Northern Ireland over the years its not too far of a step that they could of did this thing in England. Look at the horse and pony show the Brits have put on and that they have given no prof that the Russians did it. 
The fat man in North Korea has a person killed with VX in an airport, the world does nothing.
An ex Russian spy and his daughter get poisoned in England and as soon as May finished giving Bin Salman a BJ she wants to start WW3 with Russia.
Interesting point, the M mob hate Putin because he takes such a hard line protecting his people, I wonder if these two things are connected
#14
(03-15-2018, 06:25 PM)Wallfire Wrote: ...So did the Russians do it ????. 

Well the Russians are the dastardly character in this pantomime and the UK security agencies never lie, so...
And unicorns live in Hollywood.


Quote:....Well if people take a good close look at what MI5 did in Northern Ireland over the years
its not too far of a step that they could of did this thing in England.

This suggestion is the one I'd go with too.
It's just that in some instances, exterior assistance is sometimes required. The 'Gang' doesn't have to be British!

Quote:...Interesting point, the M mob hate Putin because he takes such a hard line protecting his people,
I wonder if these two things are connected.

It's the softies in the schoolyard pointing at the bully and hoping the stereotype-think will work.
minusculethumbsup
Edith Head Gives Good Wardrobe. 
#15
@"Wallfire"  &  @"BIAD" 
My husband agrees, he thinks that Putin would be much more Subtle, like a hollow umbrella and air cartridge propelling a pellet the size of a pin head filled with the Poison Ricin.
They normally don't ever attack family members.
Once A Rogue, Always A Rogue!
[Image: attachment.php?aid=936]
#16
(03-15-2018, 08:40 PM)guohua Wrote: @"Wallfire"  &  @"BIAD" 
My husband agrees, he thinks that Putin would be much more Subtle, like a hollow umbrella and air cartridge propelling a pellet the size of a pin head filled with the Poison Ricin.
They normally don't ever attack family members.

That's what I thought. I'm not a big fan of Russia and it's not the first time they've taken
out one of their own in the UK.

Below is one of the few responses from Putin's men.

Quote:'...A Russian lawmaker is suggesting that the nerve agent used on a former Russian double agent
and his daughter in Britain may have been obtained via the United States.

The U.S. was involved in cleaning up a site where the nerve agent, Novichok, was thought to have
been used during the Soviet era.

Novichok, was reportedly tested at a site in Nukus, an isolated city in Uzbekistan, a former Soviet
republic. The United States and Uzbekistan agreed on a cleanup program in 1999.

Russia's Interfax news agency quoted the deputy chairman of the foreign affairs committee in the
lower house of the Russian parliament saying the cleanup gave the U.S. the opportunity to learn
about Novichok.

Lawmaker Alexei Chepa said on Thursday: "The Americans had access not only to the technology,
but had access to its development. In all likelihood, their NATO partners from Britain also had this
access."...'
US News:

Hence, I suggested this is more than just a Russian vendetta. It could be something deeper and an act
for a future enterprise.

And this from The Guardian... who surprisingly doesn't blame Trump this time.

Quote:UK's claims questioned: doubts emerge about source of Salisbury's novichok.

'...The question now is whether all of Russia’s chemical weapons were destroyed and accounted for.
Theresa May –having identified the nerve agent used in the Salisbury attack as novichok, developed in Russia
–told the Commons on Wednesday that Russia had offered no explanation as to why it had “an undeclared
chemical weapons programme in contravention of international law”.

Jeremy Corbyn introduced a sceptical note, questioning whether there was any evidence as to the location
of its production. The exchanges provoked a debate echoing the one that preceded the 2003 invasion of Iraq
over whether UN weapons inspectors had overseen the destruction of all the weapons of mass destruction in
the country or whether Saddam Hussein had retained secret hidden caches.

On social media, there were arguments that the novichok could have come from some part of the former Soviet
Union other than Russia, such as Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan or Ukraine, or some non-state group, maybe criminals.

The years following the fall of the Berlin Wall were chaotic, with chemical weapons laboratories and storage sites
across the Soviet Union abandoned by staff who were no longer being paid.
Security was almost non-existent, leaving the sites at the mercy of criminal gangs or disenchanted staff looking to
supplement their income.

“Could somebody have smuggled something out?” Amy Smithson, a US-based biological and chemical weapons
expert, said to Reuters. “I certainly wouldn’t rule that possibility out, especially a small amount and particularly in view
of how lax the security was at Russian chemical facilities in the early 1990s.”

It took almost a decade before order was restored, in part through stockpiles being transferred to Russia from other
parts of the former Soviet Union and in part through help from US and other western experts.

Novichok was developed at a laboratory complex in Shikhany, in central Russia, according to a British weapons expert,
Hamish de Bretton-Gordon, and a Russian chemist involved in the chemical weapons programme, Vil Mirzayanov, who
later defected to the US. Mirzayanov said the novichok was tested at Nukus, in Uzbekistan.

The former British ambassador to Uzbekistan, Craig Murray, who visited the site at Nukus, said it had been dismantled
with US help. He is among those advocating scepticism about the UK placing blame on Russia.
In a blog post, he wrote: “The same people who assured you Saddam Hussein had WMDs now assure you Russian
‘novichok’ nerve agents are being wielded by Vladimir Putin to attack people on British soil.”

A Russian lawyer, Boris Kuznetsov, told Reuters he was offering to pass to the British authorities a file he said might be
relevant to the Salisbury case. It details an incident when poison hidden in a phone receiver killed a Russian banker and
his secretary in 1995.

The poison came from an employee at the state chemical facility who sold it through intermediaries –in an ampule placed
in a presentation case – to help reduce his debts...'
The Guardian:
Edith Head Gives Good Wardrobe. 
#17
Dilley says this photo ties directly into what the UK is trying to blame on Russia. 

[Image: article-2573557-1C0BB62700000578-619_634x941.jpg]


#18
(03-15-2018, 10:54 PM)Mystic Wanderer Wrote: Dilley says this photo ties directly into what the UK is trying to blame on Russia...
Could be. I'll do some digging.
Edith Head Gives Good Wardrobe. 
#19
There's another murder of a Russian that the UK Police are looking into.
This one was on March 12th, a Mr Nikolai Glushkov, 69, was the former deputy director
of Russian state airline Aeroflot.

He was jailed in 1999 for five years after being charged with money laundering and fraud
and sought asylum in Britain.

Quote:Murder inquiry over Russian's London death.

'UK police have launched a murder investigation after the death of Russian businessman
Nikolai Glushkov in south-west London. Mr Glushkov was found dead at his home in New Malden
on 12 March.

[Image: attachment.php?aid=3379]


A post-mortem examination revealed Mr Glushkov, who was 68, died from "compression to the neck".
There is, at this stage, no evidence linking the death to the attempted murder of a former Russian spy
and his daughter in Salisbury, police say.

Detectives are retaining an open mind and are appealing for any information that will assist the investigation.
In particular, they are appealing for anyone who may have seen or heard anything suspicious at or near his
home in Clarence Avenue, New Malden, between Sunday 11 March and Monday 12 March to contact them.

Police on Friday continued to guard the home lived in by Mr Glushkov. A blue and a purple tent was erected
to cover the front drive of the property, which has been cordoned off along with several adjoining properties
either side.

Mr Glushkov is the former deputy director of Russian state airline Aeroflot.
He was jailed in 1999 for five years after being charged with money laundering and fraud.

After being given a suspended sentence for another count of fraud in 2006, he was granted political asylum
in the UK in 2010 and became a critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Former PR and advertising executive Lord Bell, who was a close friend of Mr Glushkov, described him as a
"very charming, funny, affectionate man who had a troubled past".
Kate Fitzsimmons, an 87-year-old neighbour of Mr Glushkov, said he was "just an ordinary friendly Englishman"
who would wave at her across the road.

She said his death and the subsequent police activity was a "big shock".
Mr Glushkov had a close friendship with fellow Russian businessman Boris Berezovsky, who came to the UK
in 1999 after falling out with Mr Putin.

Mr Berezovsky was found hanged in the bathroom of his Berkshire home in 2013 and an inquest recorded an
open verdict. Meanwhile, Russia's investigative committee has said it has opened a criminal case investigation
into "the murder" of Mr Glushkov and the "attempted murder" of Yulia Skripal...'
SOURCE:

Oh, and by the way...

Quote:'...Mr Glushkov also had a close friendship with fellow Russian businessman Boris Berezovsky,
who came to the UK in 1999 after falling out with Mr Putin.
Mr Berezovsky was found hanged in the bathroom of his Berkshire home in 2013 and an inquest
recorded an open verdict...'

BBC:


Attached Files Thumbnail(s)
   
Edith Head Gives Good Wardrobe. 
#20
This isn't looking good for old Blighty! With certain, guaranteed and irrefutable evidence that Russian officialdom
sanctioned the attempted murders in England, it looks like the Cold War is on again.
Now... show the public and the Russian investigators that proof.

Quote:Russia spy poisoning: 23 UK diplomats expelled from Moscow.

'Russia is to expel 23 British diplomats amid tensions over the nerve agent attack on a former spy and his daughter in the UK.
The Russian foreign ministry said staff from the UK's Moscow embassy would be expelled within a week.

[Image: attachment.php?aid=3382]

Britain's ambassador to Russia, Laurie Bristow.

It also said it would close the British Council in Russia, which promotes cultural ties between the nations, and the British
Consulate in St Petersburg. The move comes in response to Britain's decision to expel 23 Russian diplomats.

They were ordered to leave over the incident on 4 March which the UK government has blamed on Russia -but which Russia denies.

Russian ex-spy Sergei Skripal, 66, and his daughter Yulia Skripal, 33, remain critically ill in hospital, after they were found unconscious
on a bench in Salisbury, Wiltshire. The UK government says they were poisoned with a nerve agent of a type developed by Russia
called Novichok, and PM Theresa May has said she believes Moscow is "culpable".

On Friday, Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said it was "overwhelmingly likely" that Russian President Vladimir Putin had ordered the
nerve agent attack. Responding, Mr Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the accusations were "shocking and unforgivable".

Britain's ambassador to Russia, Laurie Bristow, was summoned to Russia's foreign ministry on Saturday and was handed Russia's
response to the UK's sanctions...'
BBC:


Attached Files Thumbnail(s)
   
Edith Head Gives Good Wardrobe. 


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)