An interesting photograph has been published in The Mail on Sunday which shows Andrei Lugovoi with his family, holding hands with his nine year old son Yegor, just hours after it is alleged he poisoned Litvinenko by sprinkling Polonium-210 into his tea.
Is Lugovoi that stone-hearted, that he would hold the hand of his son with the same hands he allegedly sprinkled Pol-210 to murder his business partner just hours before?
Is Lugovoi a trained assassin, skilled in the lethal administration of toxic and/or radioactive material?
Does Lugovoi have any history of assassination? Or is he simply a trained bodyguard turned businessman?
Would he risk the lives of his family so? Or is that what British Intelligence would do in revenge for him refusing to cooperate?
Lugovoi told us he also lost a major contract worth millions due to the allegations made against him. Is that the kind of revenge British Intelligence would like to gain for Lugovoi refusing to cooperate with them? They stitched up Jamil el-Banna and sent him to Guantanamo Bay.
If it is possible to determine when the Pol-210 traces were laid and they coincide with the EXACT times that Lugovoi was there then that would be strong evidence against him.
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From http://www.mailonsunday.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=459474&in_page_id=1770&in_a_source=
Holding the hand of his nine-year-old son, and surrounded by family and friends, this is Andrei Lugovoi hours after he allegedly poisoned Russian dissident Alexander Litvinenko.
The picture was taken by Lugovoi's wife Svetlana at a London restaurant on November 1 last year - the day he is accused of slipping deadly nuclear material into Litvinenko's tea.
The picture, published for the first time, shows Lugovoi, his son Yegor, daughter Galina, 19, and friends before they set off to watch a football match between Arsenal and CSKA Moscow at the Emirates Stadium.
According to British detectives, Lugovoi laced his former KGB colleague's tea with a radioactive isotope during a meeting at an hotel earlier that day.
The investigators later found radiation at the restaurant and the group's seats at the stadium.
Lugovoi now faces an extradition request to face a murder trial but his friends say he is innocent.
Yesterday, Lugovoi's business partner Vyacheslav Sokolenko, 38, who is also in the photograph, said: "When this picture was taken, we had grabbed a couple of drinks before the game. Andrei was there with his wife and kids.
"He's innocent. What man in his right mind would put his family at risk of poisoning in this way?"
All Lugovoi's family members later tested positive for traces of polonium.
Before his death on November 23, Litvinenko claimed his murder was ordered by President Putin.
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