21.01.2016 Views

The Litvinenko Inquiry

2429870

2429870

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Part 4 | Chapters 1 to 6 | Why would anyone wish to kill Alexander <strong>Litvinenko</strong>?<br />

4.118 As we shall see, this would not be the last occasion on which Mr Lugovoy would<br />

provide Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> with substandard material when purportedly assisting him in<br />

making enquiries into Russian targets.<br />

4.119 Mr Quirke’s evidence was that he had one further formal meeting with Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong><br />

and Mr Lugovoy. That meeting took place on 17 October 2006. 115 Also present on that<br />

occasion was Mr Kovtun. I shall return to that meeting in due course.<br />

Erinys/Titon<br />

4.120 <strong>The</strong> other two London private security companies with which Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> became<br />

involved in the last year of his life were linked to each other. <strong>The</strong> two companies<br />

shared a director and also a suite of offices in Mayfair – offices that were to play an<br />

important part in the events that led to Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s death.<br />

4.121 Mr John Holmes, who gave oral evidence to the <strong>Inquiry</strong>, was a director of a large<br />

multinational security company named Erinys International. He operated its UK<br />

subsidiary, Erinys UK. He was assisted in doing so by Mr Tim Reilly, who was employed<br />

by Erinys UK as a consultant. <strong>The</strong> major business of both Erinys companies was the<br />

provision of physical security services to the oil industry. 116<br />

4.122 Mr Holmes was also a co-director of an investigative due diligence business called<br />

Titon International Limited. <strong>The</strong> other director, who managed the day to day work of<br />

the company, was called Mr Dean Attew.<br />

4.123 Both companies were based in offices at 25 Grosvenor Street, Mayfair.<br />

4.124 Mr Attew’s evidence was that he first met Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> in 2004; thereafter the two men<br />

became close personal friends and, latterly, business associates. 117 Mr Attew stated<br />

that he saw Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> from time to time after they first met, and they became<br />

friends, but that they did not start to work together until about six months before<br />

Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> died – that is, about May 2006. It is clear that during those six months<br />

the two men became even closer – Mr Attew said that Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> would often pop<br />

into the Mayfair offices for a short chat – something that he sometimes did several<br />

times a week. 118<br />

4.125 Mr Attew described how another investigator for whom he sometimes worked needed<br />

some enquiries conducted on Russian targets, and that he asked Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> to<br />

undertake the work. He said that he probably requested the first of these reports from<br />

Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> in August 2006. Mr Attew’s evidence was that Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> produced<br />

a total of four due diligence reports. 119 It was apparent from the evidence of Mr Attew<br />

and others that, as with the work that he did for Mr Quirke relating to Mr Gordeyev,<br />

Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> obtained assistance from others in preparing these reports. For the first<br />

draft of one of the reports, Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> sought assistance from Mr Lugovoy. For the<br />

second draft of that report, and for all the others, Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> was assisted by Yuri<br />

Shvets. 120<br />

115<br />

Quirke 11/86-87<br />

116<br />

Holmes 7/50-53<br />

117<br />

Attew 13/15-17<br />

118<br />

Attew 13/17-22<br />

119<br />

Attew 13/25-26; 13/28-32. (<strong>The</strong>re was a small degree of inconsistency between the evidence of Mr Attew<br />

and that of Mr Shvets as to the subjects of the reports, but I did not consider this inconsistency to be material.)<br />

120<br />

Attew 13/28-30<br />

77

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!