Allegation or opinion? You prove it is not a fact. Your UK police friends may help.
An alleged witness was utilised to "inform" the public of a crime. Since he was "cured" nobody has asked zilch.
Have they been warned off, officially or quietly, or has he served his purpose and now the spotlight is switched off?
On with the next fairy tale, but the shit clings to the integrity of the chosen victim. This method has been used time after time. If you can look back in recent and ancient history, just for a second or too. I'm sure your web search engine of choice will help.
You could ask your UK police "friends"to confirm this "opinion":
"A DS does NOT get called to drunks on a bench (the initial call to Wiltshire Constabulary), nor does a regular CID DS go to search the house of drunks found on a bench. Both of these are uniform roles.
Nor would general duty police, uniform or CID, know who a resettled SIS agent was, let alone where he’d been settled. There may have/should have been a restricted marker flagged on the national computer, but access to the knowledge contained therein would be extremely limited."
And this:
"do you not realise that DS Bailey’s wife works for Cambrdige Analytica?"
Allegedlyinfo about DS Bailey which ran on Sky News on 8 March. Not being a Sky listener I can't confirm it.:
"The police officer who fell seriously ill after the nerve agent attack put a rapist behind bars who had been at large for decades.Detective Sergeant Nick Bailey, 38, is now stable and conscious after being in intensive care following the attack. Ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia are still critically ill after they were found collapsed on a bench in Salisbury.
DS Bailey was one of the first at the scene when the pair were found slumped in The Maltings on Sunday. The officer was recognised for outstanding police work in December 2016 when he put a Salisbury rapist behind bars for more than 14 years. He spent two years building a case against Arthur Bonner, who sexually assaulted numerous victims over four decades between the early 1970s and 2014. His work was praised by the then chief constable Mike Veale for his dedication and outstanding professionalism and for the sensitive way he dealt with the victims and their families.
Acting Chief Constable of Wiltshire Police, Kier Pritchard, said he had been to visit DS Bailey. He said: “I’ve known Nick for many years, he’s a great character. He’s a huge presence in Wiltshire Police – well-liked, well-loved, a massively dedicated officer. “He’s clearly receiving high specialist treatment. He’s well, he’s sat up. He’s clearly not the Nick that I know, but he’s in the safe hands of the medical professionals working in Salisbury District Hospital.
“But he’s very anxious, very concerned. He did his best on that night. I’m proud of all our staff who attended this incident at the Maltings on that night. They responded to try to protect people who were ill, with limited information.”
Messages of support have poured in for DS Bailey from the public and police forces across the country. Sarah Bailey, from Waters Road, Salisbury, said DS Bailey was involved in a case with her a few years ago. She told the Salisbury Journal: “He was fantastic, so helpful and supportive. I really do hope he has a full and speedy recovery."
It may be useful to search telephone records of the three alleged victims.
Some MSM and the local Russian Ambassador which may assist you:
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2018/03/28/russian-hit-squad-put-nerve-agent-sergei-skripals-front-door/
https://news.sky.com/story/russias-novichok-programme-exists-i-worked-on-it-scientist-tells-sky-news-11300710
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/poisoned-policeman-leaves-hospital-hg0ftjgk2
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/5760557/nick-bailey-detective-sergeant-russian-spy-sergei-skripal-daughter-yulia-poison-plot-leave-hospital-recovering/
https://twitter.com/RussianEmbassy/s...93790762405888