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Dead ex-Russian spy was poisoned twice, lawyer says

Marina Litvinenko, the widow of former Russian intelligence officer Alexander Litvinenko, and their son Anatoly leave for a break Tuesday during proceedings at the Royal Courts of Justice in London. (Associated Press)
Alexandra Zavis Los Angeles Times

LONDON – Former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko may have survived a previous poisoning attempt before a lethal dose of polonium was slipped into his tea at a London hotel, a long-awaited judicial inquiry into his death was told Tuesday.

The former KGB officer, an outspoken critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin, was living in Britain and doing consultancy work for British intelligence service MI-6 when he met two Russians for a drink at the Millennium Hotel in November 2006. Weeks later, he suffered an agonizing death, apparently from radiation poisoning.

On his deathbed, Litvinenko claimed that he had been poisoned on Putin’s orders.

Russia has denied the claim and has refused to extradite the two men identified by Britain as the prime suspects, Dmitry Kovtun and former KGB agent Andrei Lugovoi. They have been invited to give evidence to the inquiry via video link from Russia.

On the opening day of the inquiry into Litvinenko’s death, lawyer Robin Tam said evidence would be heard that the Russian dissident “was poisoned with polonium not once, but twice.”

Litvinenko had complained of feeling ill around the time of another meeting with Kovtun and Lugovoi at a security company in mid-October, a couple of weeks before he was hospitalized, Tam said, according to British news reports.

Britain’s decision to open a public investigation led by a senior judge came after a separate official inquest was found not to be equipped to deal with potential issues of national security.

Ben Emmerson, a lawyer representing Litvinenko’s family, said he was killed for trying to expose Putin’s “mafia state.”