After ANOTHER Putin critic’s mystery death – how Vlad’s killing machine is in overdrive after vowing to hunt ‘traitors’
BRITISH aid worker James Le Mesurier’s fatal fall from a balcony has shone the spotlight on a number of mysterious Kremlin linked deaths in the UK.
The former British Army Officer, who founded the White Helmets humanitarian group and exposed carnage caused by Russian air strikes in Syria, reportedly fell to his death at his home in Istanbul.
While Turkish authorities are treating his death as suicide, some fear Le Mesurier — who Russia accused of being a spy — could have been bumped off by Vladimir Putin’s henchmen.
Investigative journalist Heidi Blake believes it's a strong possibility.
In her book, : Putin's Ruthless Killing Campaign and Secret War on the West, which is being serialised in the , she said: "There are good grounds for suspicion.
"We have established that Putin has poured resources into a laboratory outside Moscow where armies of government scientists have been working for years to refine nerve agents, deadly germs, obscure carcinogens and radioactive poisons designed to kill assassination targets without leaving a trace.
"These substances can be administered orally, in sprays, or in vapours to trigger fast-acting cancers, heart attacks, or multiple organ failure.
"Putin even has an arsenal of psychotropic drugs with which to destabilise his enemies – powerful mood-altering substances designed to plunge targets into enough mental anguish to take their own lives or to make staged suicides look believable."
Ms Blake claims Putin’s lust for revenge, or forces linked to him, has led to deaths of more than a dozen people in the UK.
Alexander Litvinenko
The former KGB agent fled to the UK fearing he would be killed after he refused an order to kill oligarch Boris Berezovsky.
In exile in London he was a paid consultant for MI6 and was also a strong critic of Putin's regime, accusing it of staging terrorist bombings and other acts to bolster its power.
Litvinenko died three weeks after drinking tea laced with polonium-210 at a meeting with two Russians at a Mayfair hotel in 2006.
On his deathbed aged 44 he accused Putin of murdering him, and a public inquiry later ruled the Russian president had probably approved the hit.
Boris Berezovsky
Russian exile and oligarch Boris Berezovsky, a high profile opponent of Putin, was found dead at his home, Titness Park, at Sunninghill, near Ascot in Berkshire on March 2013.
A post-mortem found he was hanged but an inquest recorded an open verdict.
Before his death he had repeatedly expressed fears of state-sponsored killing and was to be a key witness at the inquest of poisoned spy Alexander Litvinenko, whom he helped finance his friend Litvinenko when he claimed political asylum in Britain.
Berezovsky is said to have survived at least two assassination attempts in the UK.
It was reported he had sought a truce with Putin shortly before he was found hanged in his Berkshire mansion in 2013, aged 67.
Friends have long suspected a Kremlin hit, but in 2016 a Russian intelligence expert claimed he was killed by British spies after threatening to expose pornographic photos of Prince Philip.
Scot Young
In December 8 2014 Scottish property developer Scot Young was found impaled on spiked railings 60ft beneath a £2million flat.
But just eight minutes earlier, Young had conducted a perfectly normal and cheery phone call with his daughter.
His family has always maintained the 52-year-old must have been forced out the window of his fourth floor apartment in Marylebone, central London, in December 2014, and that it was no accident or suicide.
Curiously he had worked as a fixer for Berezovsky and amassed a rumoured £400million fortune in his own right.
The flashy tycoon was later jailed for contempt after a judge said he was hiding his wealth in divorce proceedings.
Yet he said his fortune had vanished in a mysterious Moscow property deal, and told friends he was being targeted by a team of Russian hitmen.
After his death a pal revealed mafia mobsters had dangled Young from a hotel balcony two years earlier.
The friend said: "I do not believe for one minute he committed suicide. I believe he was murdered. He owed a lot of money to the wrong people."
He was the ninth member of a circle of friends and business associates to die in suspicious circumstances.
Badri Patarkatsishvili
The Georgian businessman was Berezovsky's business partner and an associate of
He was 52 when he dropped dead of an apparent heart attack at his home in Leatherhead, Surrey, in 2008.
Cops tested the property for radioactive materials, but came up empty handed.
An inquiry found FSB agent Andrei Lugovoi had met Patarkatsishvili in the days before the 2006 polonium attack on Litvinenko.
Lugovoi was named as prime suspect in the poisoning.
Patarkatsishvili told police their meeting was to discuss outdoor advertising in Moscow.
But after he died, his friends and family suspected another poisoning ordered by Putin.
Nikolai Glushkov
Russian airline mogul Nikolai Glushkov, 68, was found with "strangulation marks" at his home in New Malden, South West London by his daughter Natalia on March 12 2018.
is death was initially treated by police as unexplained.
His death came a week after the poisoning of Sergei and Yulia Skripal in Salisbury.
On 16 March 2018, the Metropolitan Policestated they were now treating his death as murder but said "at this stage there is nothing to suggest any link to the attempted murders in Salisbury".
Counter-terrorism investigators maintain a lead role in the investigation into the unsolved case.
Stephen Curtis
Lawyer Stephen Curtis — who was no relation to Robert — introduced Scot Young and two of his Ring of Death pals to Russian contacts in the early 2000s.
He was killed when his brand new £1.5million helicopter crashed a mile from Bournemouth airport in 2004.
A week before the fatal crash Curtis is said to have told a friend: “If anything happens to me in the next few weeks, it will not be an accident.”
Stephen Curtis was named in US intelligence files as the possible victim of a Russian hit.
Stephen Moss
Another lawyer who may have become a target after helping Russian oligarchs funnel money into Britain, according to the Buzzfeed report.
Stephen Moss died of an apparent heart attack aged 46 in 2003.
He was also named in the US intelligence files.
Security sources have said Russian scientists can produce untraceable toxins that trigger cardiac arrest.
Badri Patarkatsishvili
The Georgian businessman was Berezovsky's business partner and an associate of Litvinenko.
He was 52 when he dropped dead of an apparent heart attack at his home in Leatherhead, Surrey, in 2008.
Cops tested the property for radioactive materials, but came up empty handed.
An inquiry found FSB agent Andrei Lugovoi had met Patarkatsishvili in the days before the 2006 polonium attack on Litvinenko.
Lugovoi was named as prime suspect in the poisoning.
Patarkatsishvili told police their meeting was to discuss outdoor advertising in Moscow.
But after he died, his friends and family suspected another poisoning ordered by Putin.
Lieutenant Colonel Robert Workman
On January 2004 Robert Workman was shot dead when he opened his door of his home in Furneux Pelham
The murder was a mystery, although the Mail on Sunday reported police made made a connection.
It was theorised that Mr Workman shared a surname with the extradition judge who had refused to send a Putin’s critici, Boris Berezovsky back to Moscow.
The gunman later proved to be a local man who described himself to a cellmate as a “modern day hitman”, although he has never revealed who paid him to carry out the killing.
Sergei Skripal
In March 2018 double agent Colonel Skripal, 66, and his daughter Yulia, 33, are critically ill after being "exposed to an unknown substance" in Salisbury, Wilts.
The former Soviet military intelligence officer Skripal, who was living in the UK after a spy swap, and his daughter Yulia were fighting for their lives after being poisoned by a deadly Russian nerve agent, Novichok, which had been smeared on the door handle of his home in Salisbury.
They have since recovered.