UK coroner asks for public inquiry into Novichok poisonings

FILE - In this Saturday April 6, 2019 file photo, Novichok poisoning victim Charlie Rowley, talks with Russian Ambassador to the UK Alexander Yakovenko, inside the Russian Embassy in London. A coroner presiding over an inquest the 2018 death of Rowley's partner Dawn Sturgess, who was poisoned by a Soviet-developed nerve agent, wants the probe to be turned into a public inquiry so she can examine Russia’s possible involvement, it was announced Wednesday, Sept. 22, 2021. Unlike an inquest, British law allows a public inquiry to consider sensitive intelligence material during partly closed hearings. (RTR via AP, file)
FILE - In this Saturday April 6, 2019 file photo, Novichok poisoning victim Charlie Rowley, talks with Russian Ambassador to the UK Alexander Yakovenko, inside the Russian Embassy in London. A coroner presiding over an inquest the 2018 death of Rowley's partner Dawn Sturgess, who was poisoned by a Soviet-developed nerve agent, wants the probe to be turned into a public inquiry so she can examine Russia’s possible involvement, it was announced Wednesday, Sept. 22, 2021. Unlike an inquest, British law allows a public inquiry to consider sensitive intelligence material during partly closed hearings. (RTR via AP, file)

LONDON (AP) — A coroner presiding over an inquest into the death of British woman who was poisoned by a Soviet- developed nerve agent after an attack targeting a Russian ex-spy said Wednesday she wants the probe to be turned into a public inquiry so she can examine Russia’s possible involvement.

Unlike an inquest, British law allows a public inquiry to consider sensitive intelligence material during partly closed hearings. The inquiry coroner Heather Hallett requested to consider any role played by the Russian government in the 2018 death of Dawn Sturgess would be unlikely to start before 2023.

Sturgess, 44, and her partner collapsed in the southwest England town of Amesbury after coming into contact with a small perfume bottle containing Novichok, a military grade nerve agent.

The pair were exposed three months after Russian ex-spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter were sickened in a Novichok attack in the nearby city of Salisbury.

Adam Straw, a lawyer representing Sturgess’ family and her partner, Charlie Rowley, said the “overriding concern is to ensure the truth of how Ms. Sturgess died is established.”

“No family should wait 5½ years to find out how someone died,” he said.

Britain’s government on Tuesday named and charged a third Russian suspect in the Novichok poisonings. It alleges three men working for Russia’s military intelligence service traveled to the U.K. for a mission targeting the Skripals before flying back to Moscow. Russia vehemently denies the allegations.

Rowley told authorities he found the perfume bottle containing traces of the nerve agent in a trash bin.

Britain has acknowledged extradition requests for the three suspects would be futile and they cannot be brought to trial as long as they remain in Russia. While there is almost no chance of a criminal trial, lawyers believe a public inquiry is the best way to find out what happened.

The Skripals were left seriously ill after Novichok was smeared on Sergei Skripal’s door handle in March 2018. The father and daughter survived. Sturgess died in July that year after she and Rowley came into contact with the discarded perfume bottle the month before. Rowley later recovered.