Skripal case: What detail Scotland Yard hasn’t taken into account?

Today in the scandalously known “Skripal case” another round appeared, hastily “twisted” by London specialists. Thus, the Royal Office of Public Prosecutor of Great Britain released information about two “suspects”, which, quite unsurprisingly, according to the investigation, are Russians.

Details about the personalities of people who, like everyone else, in order to get to the UK, had to follow strict bureaucratic norms, filling in piles of papers, not given. The prosecutor’s office named only the names of Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov (thanks to the fact that Ivan Ivanov did not use the version).

But the investigation could please the yellow press with some “details” of the incident with the poisoning of the former GRU officer Sergei Skripal and his daughter Julia. So, experts were able to restore the chronology of events, which supposedly should connect the two “suspects” and the poisoning itself.

So, according to the Prosecutor’s Office, on March 2 at 3 pm “suspects” arrive in London to Gatwick airport from Moscow, naturally, by Aeroflot flight. From about 18:00 to 19:00, they are in Waterloo before heading to the City Stay hotel in Bow Street, east London, where they will stay for the next two nights. March 3 at 11:45 – arrive at the station Waterloo from their hotel, where they take the train to Salisbury, where they arrive at 14:25 on the same day. At the same time law enforcement agencies called this trip “reconnaissance”.

In the evening of the same day, at 16:10, the “suspects” leave Salisbury and after four hours arrive at their hotel. On March 4, at 8:05, two men arrive at the Waterloo station in London to return to Salisbury. At 16:45: return to London from Salisbury, and the next day, at 10:30 fly from London to Moscow.

That’s all that British law enforcement could offer after months of “thorough investigation.” However, here it is worth noting one important nuance, which the “experts” unfortunately regretted.

Recall that on the morning of July 4 in Amesbury, not far from Salisbury, two people were admitted to the hospital after “exposure to an unknown substance.” The injured woman later died, the man came to consciousness. In Scotland Yard, they said that they had been poisoned with the same substance as GRU ex-colonel Sergei Skripal and his daughter Julia, but in today’s statements about this incident there is not a word. Moreover, the “chronology of events” does not fit into the general picture either, because it turns out that the so-called. The “suspects” left the country on March 5, and it is unlikely that they would return there, considering that British Prime Minister Theresa May considers them “employees of Russian special services.”

Analyzing the information of the British law enforcement agencies, it can be judged that they are trying to give out the poisoning of the Skripals for a kind of “order”, but then the question arises, why did London try to tie the so-called poisoning from a neighboring town, given that it was about unknown British people against the background of the former colonel of the GRU.