Police
raid nuclear expert Dr Chris Busby's Bideford home with absurd story
he's a bomb-maker
Public
Enquiry
Furious
British nuclear expert, 73, who appears on Russian state TV claims
'irritating' police arrested him on suspicion of making a bomb
after he criticised the Government over radiation risks Dr Chris
Busby's home in the sleepy Devon town of Bideford was raided by
police
The scientist, 73, was in custody for 19 hours but released with no further action Police attended the address initially over concerns about a woman's welfare But officers complained of feeling unwell and were checked by an ambulance
The scientist, 73, was in custody for 19 hours but released with no further action Police attended the address initially over concerns about a woman's welfare But officers complained of feeling unwell and were checked by an ambulance
Furious
British nuclear expert, 73, who appears on Russian state TV claims
'irritating' police arrested him on suspicion of making a bomb after
he criticised the Government over radiation risks
- Dr Chris Busby's home in the sleepy Devon town of Bideford was raided by police
- The scientist, 73, was in custody for 19 hours but released with no further action
- Police attended the address initially over concerns about a woman's welfare
- But officers complained of feeling unwell and were checked by an ambulance
- He was arrested amid scared it was linked to poisoning of Russian Sergei Skripal
15
September, 2018
A
chemical weapons expert who appears on Russian TV said he's irritated
by the way police treated him during his arrest.
Former
research scientist Dr Chris Busby - an outspoken critic of the
British Government's handlings of the Salisbury poisoning - was held
after officers reported feeling unwell during a raid on his property
on Wednesday morning.
Police
had initially targeted the address in the sleepy seaside town of
Bideford, Devon, over concerns for a woman's welfare.
However
officers complained of feeling unwell and were immediately checked
over by an ambulance Hazardous Area Response Team and fire crews.
The
73-year-old was arrested under the Explosives Act and spent 19 hours
in custody.
Following
his release Dr Busby told the BBC he believed that was down to
'psychological problems associated with their knowledge of the
Skripal poisoning'.
The
scientist said he was handcuffed and interviewed all night by police
who suspected he was making a bomb, but the only substances found at
his home were 'innocuous chemicals for research into radiation'.
He
returned home that night to find officers had searched his home
laboratory and sealed off his property.
He
said: 'They destroyed my experiment. It was most irritating.'
Dr
Busby said he felt he was being targeted because of his criticism of
the Government's current assessment of radiation risks.
Devon
and Cornwall Police said the matter was now not being treated as
criminal, but as a matter of public safety.
A
spokesman said: 'Following searches within the property, a number of
items were found which required expert analysis from specialist
officers and an Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) team. Police have
also been supported by fire and ambulance at the scene.
'Police
have worked closely with partner agencies to ensure the safety of the
public and the property.
'Enquires
have now been completed at the address and it has been deemed that
there is no risk to the wider public.
'A
73-year-old man was arrested under the explosives act. He has since
been released and no further action will be taken in relation to this
incident.'
Here
is Chris on the Skripal affair
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