
Putin's cyber spooks who hacked Skripal's family in series of attacks are unmasked by British intel chiefs
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
RUSSIAN spies who led a series of attacks on Britain have been exposed by UK intelligence chiefs.
Whitehall has imposed sanctions on Vladimir Putin's spooks responsible for years of hacking and other actions in the UK.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
3
Yulia Skripal and her father Sergei were poisoned by Russian spies in 2018. Yulia was also hacked by Putin's spooks before the attack
Credit: East2west News
The measures target three GRU military intelligence units and 18 spooks — two of whom were accused of hacking the phone of defector Sergei Skripal's daughter.
Ivan Yermakov and Aleksey Lukashev — both wanted by the FBI — are said to have targeted Yulia five years before Russia poisoned her and her dad with nerve agent Novichok in Salisbury in 2018.
Others hit with sanctions are believed to be behind bombings and arson attacks in Britain and Europe in retaliation for support for Ukraine.
They face a range of restrictions such as having financial assets frozen.
Foreign Secretary David Lammy said: 'GRU spies are running a campaign to destabilise Europe, undermine Ukraine's sovereignty and threaten the safety of British citizens.
"The Kremlin should be in no doubt; we see what they are trying to do in the shadows and won't tolerate it.'
Three men were this month convicted of torching an East London warehouse involved in shipping aid to Ukraine, on the orders of Russia's Wagner Group mercenaries.
Spy chiefs are also probing if Russian agents were behind an incendiary device that ignited at a DHL hub in Birmingham last year.
Similar incidents have been reported across Europe.
3
Ivan Yermakov is said to have targeted Sergei Skripal's daughter Yulia five years before Russia poisoned her and her dad
Credit: Reuters
3
Aleksey Lukashev is also said to have targeted Yulia before she was poisoned with nerve agent Novichok in Salisbury in 2018
Credit: FBI

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
Man, 85, & woman in her 70s killed as driver in his 60s also left fighting for his life after horror four-car crash
DOUBLE TRAGEDY Man, 85, & woman in her 70s killed as driver in his 60s also left fighting for his life after horror four-car crash Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) AN elderly man and woman have been killed in a horror four-car crash, as a driver fights for his life. Emergency services were called to the A44 tragedy in Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, at around 3.20pm on Wednesday July 9. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up Officers discovered a grey Audi A3, grey Jaguar XE, black Ford Puma and grey Seat Leon were all involved with the pile-up near Enstone. Paramedics rushed a woman, aged in her 70s, to hospital with life-threatening injuries. Cops confirmed she sadly passed away today, and her family are being supported by specialist officers. The driver of the Ford, an 85-year-old man, was tragically pronounced dead at the scene. A man behind the wheel of the Jaguar, aged in his 60s, is still fighting for his life in serious condition. Thames Valley Police confirmed no arrests have been made. Investigating officer Detective Sergeant Lyndsey Blackaby, of the Serious Collision Investigation Unit, added: 'Tragically, a second person has now died following this collision. 'Our thoughts are with her loved ones at this extremely difficult time and we have specially-trained officers supporting her family. 'If anyone witnessed the incident, has dash-camera footage or any information to assist our investigation, please get in touch. 'You can contact us by calling 101 or via our website, quoting reference number 43250344163.'


The Guardian
2 hours ago
- The Guardian
‘We painted, sang songs': the Russian woman found living in Indian cave with daughters
According to Nina Kutina, life for her and her two daughters in their jungle cave had been peaceful. Buried deep in the forests of Gokarna, a coastal town in southern India, they had woken 'up with the sun, swam in rivers and lived in nature'. 'I cooked on a fire or gas cylinder, depending on the season, and got groceries from a nearby village. We painted, sang songs, read books and lived peacefully,' Kutina said, according to Indian media reports. Then the police arrived. The story of how the 40-year-old Russian woman and her daughters, aged six and four, came to be living in a damp cave in the state of Karnataka has gripped the country. The family was discovered by police on 9 July during a patrol of the hilly forest area, which is popular with tourists, when officers spied a curtain of red saris hanging in the trees. Moving closer, they realised it was covering the entrance of a cave. A statue of a Hindu god was visible, as were scattered items of clothing. Then a blond child emerged. Behind her, the police were astonished to find Kutina, asleep with another child by her side. Kutina told officers she had moved to the cave for meditation and prayer, and to get herself and her children away from modern urban life and into nature. She had cooked vegetable curries and roti on a small gas stove and they had bathed in waterfalls and slept on plastic mats. Police believe she had been there for at least a week when they found her and had spent several stints living in the cave over the past nine months. Kutina dismissed the officers' warnings that it was a highly dangerous place to live, especially during the monsoon, telling police that 'animals and snakes are our friends' and that it was only humans who were dangerous. Despite her objections, police insisted on removing the family from the cave and taking them back to the town, where they were placed in a shelter after Kutina had a hospital checkup. M Narayana, a local superintendent of police, said Kutina appeared 'deeply disillusioned with human society, yet still compassionate and spiritually grounded'. Kutina messaged a friend after being taken from her 'big and beautiful cave', saying her family had been 'placed in a prison without sky, without grass, without a waterfall, with an icy hard floor on which we now sleep for 'protection from rain and snakes'…. Once again, evil has won.' According to immigration records cited by Indian officials, Kutina first travelled to India in 2016, ending up in Arambol Beach, in Goa, a destination popular with Russian travellers. A year later, she had begun a relationship with an Israeli man, Dror Goldstein. After overstaying her visa in 2018, Kutina was deported to Russia and travelled to Ukraine, where she had their first daughter. She already had two older sons from a previous relationship. In 2020, Kutina returned to India with her children. She reunited with Goldstein in Goa and became pregnant again, making money as an art and language teacher. According to Goldstein, who spoke to Indian media, Kutina began withdrawing from him and would disappear for long periods with their two daughters. Then, in October last year, her eldest son, 21, was killed in a motorcycle crash in India. After Goldstein travelled to Nepal to renew his visa, he returned to Goa to find Kutina and their daughters had disappeared. He filed a police report in December but had heard nothing until reports of their discovery emerged this week. Asked by journalists why she had remained in India without any valid documents, Kutina said there were 'many complicated reasons'. 'First, there were multiple personal losses – not just the death of my son, but also a few other close people. We were constantly dealing with grief, paperwork and other problems,' she said. Kutina claimed her son's ashes were among the belongings removed from the cave. With no valid documents to remain, the family were moved to a detention centre and police are arranging for Kutina's deportation to Russia.


Scottish Sun
2 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Ghislaine Maxwell's brother fears she will be KILLED in jail ‘like Epstein'… as he vows to free sex trafficker sister
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) GHISLAINE Maxwell's brother is afraid she will be killed in prison "like Jeffrey Epstein". Ian Maxwell, 68, is hoping to get his convicted sex trafficker sister out of jail using new evidence. 6 Ghislaine Maxwell (in black) pictured with her brother Ian (right) and her parents Robert and Elisabeth in 1990 Credit: Bridgeman Images 6 Ian Maxwell fears his sister will be killed in prison Credit: AP 6 The disgraced British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell posing with husband Jeffrey Epstein Credit: PA Ian said he fears for her life behind bars in Tallahassee's federal prison, and warned she's no longer safe inside the overcrowded facility. Worried about her every day, he told the Daily Mail: 'There's such overcrowding in Tallahassee that higher-category prisoners are being placed there and it's becoming a facility that is more dangerous – we've got to get her out of there. 'Normally she spends a lot of time in the prison library helping other prisoners with things like form filling, but she has to go from A to B and isn't always surrounded by guards. 'It's a possibility someone might get to her. I don't want to be dramatic but you can't discount it. Look what happened to Epstein.' Maxwell, 63, is currently serving a 20-year sentence after being convicted in 2021 of helping Epstein lure underage girls into a web of abuse stretching back to the 1990s. During her three-week trial in 2021, jurors heard prosecutors describe Maxwell as "dangerous". While her legal appeals have been thrown out by multiple courts, Ian insists the fight is far from over to get the disgraced British socialite out. The brother revealed her legal team is plotting a last-ditch effort involving new evidence and an explosive habeas corpus filing. He admitted hopes that the US Supreme Court will hear her case are slim. Trump blasts 'are we still talking about this creep-' over Epstein as mystery swirls around 'missing CCTV & client list' 'It's not a done deal,' he said. 'About 10,000 petitions are lodged each year and they only hear 200 to 250 cases.' But if that fails, the family says they'll take another legal route. 'If they don't hear Ghislaine's case… we will go another route and file a writ of habeas corpus which allows a prisoner to challenge their imprisonment on the basis of new evidence, such as government misconduct.' The family have long argued Maxwell was made a scapegoat for Epstein's crimes and treated harshly to satisfy public outrage after the convicted paedophile died in his cell in 2019. 'I fully believe my sister is innocent and that she will be released some day in the future,' Ian said. The Maxwell family has consistently claimed she was denied a fair trial. And now they're reportedly banking on a controversial 2007 agreement Epstein struck with the Department of Justice to shield his co-conspirators from prosecution. In a recent statement, the family said: 'Our sister Ghislaine did not receive a fair trial. 'Her legal team continues to fight her case in the courts and will file its reply in short order to the government's opposition in the US Supreme Court. 'If necessary, in due course they will also file a writ of habeas corpus in the U.S. District Court, SDNY. 'This allows her to challenge her imprisonment based on new evidence, such as government misconduct that would have likely changed the trial's outcome.' 6 Maxwell, 63, was convicted in 2021 of helping Epstein lure underage girls into a web of abuse Credit: AFP 6 Convicted paedophile Epstein died in prison in 2019 Credit: Rex Judges have already rejected the defence team's claim that she "should never have been prosecuted" because of the "weird" 2007 plea deal, but the family appears undeterred. It also comes amid reports that Maxwell is pursuing a pardon from Donald Trump, following the closure of the US probe into Epstein's death and financial dealings. A source close to Maxwell exclusively told The Sun on Sunday there's a 'window of momentum' in her favor. The insider said: 'Those close to her believe it's unfair that she alone is paying for Epstein's crimes and call into question much of the evidence against her. 'Now her legal team feel as if they have a rare window of momentum so they are set to take up her case with the President.' Meanwhile, renewed political pressure is mounting over the unresolved mysteries surrounding Epstein's sick empire. Democratic Senator Ron Wyden has claimed a 'big' Epstein file 'full of actionable information' is gathering dust in the Treasury Department — information that could shine more light on the financier's global sex trafficking network. 'Somewhere in the Treasury Department… locked away in a cabinet drawer, is a big Epstein file that's full of actionable information,' Wyden said on the Senate floor. He has urged federal authorities to investigate nearly $1.1 billion in suspicious wire transfers linked to Epstein, as well as his connections to Russian banks and the trafficking of women from Eastern Europe. Although the Biden administration has dismissed claims of hidden records as 'fantasies' and 'political theatre,' calls for transparency around Epstein's finances and ties to powerful individuals continue to grow.