Salisbury ex-spy’s red BMW now at centre of nerve agent probe as police appeal for people who saw poisoned pair in car
POISONED ex-spy Sergei Skripal's red BMW is at the centre of a probe into how he and his daughter were poisoned by an unknown nerve agent.
With Skripal and his daughter Yulia still in critical condition, it is alleged the Russian double agent was poisoned after touching the door handle which was smeared in the toxic substance.
Police are appealing for witnesses who saw them sitting in the BMW 3-Series before they succumbed to the effects of an attack in Salisbury, Wiltshire.
Counter-terrorism cops are trying to piece together a "missing 40 minutes" at a Sainsbury's car park at around 1.40pm on Sunday, March 4.
Scotland Yard Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu said officers have collected 380 pieces of evidence of what he branded an "attempted murder", .
One theory put forward by experts is the nerve agent was placed in the car's ventilation system or dusted somewhere they would touch it.
What we know so far:
- Ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal, 66, and his daughter Yulia, 33, were found unconscious on a bench in Salisbury on March 4
- Police say they were deliberately targeted with a rare nerve agent
- Prime Minister Theresa May accused Russia of poisoning Skripal using deadly nerve agent novichok
- Cops are looking for a woman who walked around Salisbury in a black face mask one hour before Skripal was attacked
- The first Wiltshire cop on the scene is also ill in hospital but hopes were raised for his recovery now he is awake and talking
- Russian state TV warned 'traitor' double-agents they are not safe in the UK
- It was revealed Sergei's MI6 contact had links to poisoned ex-spy Alexander Litvinenko
- Cops want to hear from anyone who saw the red BMW (HD09 WAO) in Salisbury
"Using the car would explain why both Mr Skripal and his daughter got a dose,"said Philip Ingram, a former British military intelligence officer.
Yesterday, Prime Minister Theresa May gave Vladimir Putin a deadline of midnight to explain if Russia had a part in the poisoning.
Mrs May added that, if no "credible" explanation came within the next ten hours, she would declare it "an unlawful use of force".