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Ex-spy's poison on the Internet $69 can get you a trace - commonly used lethal industrial substance
SF Gate.com ^ | Tuesday, November 28, 2006 | Keay Davidson

Posted on 11/28/2006 2:36:46 PM PST by fight_truth_decay

$69 can get you a trace of the commonly used lethal industrial substance...

It's one of the deadliest imaginable poisons, a radioactive substance about 100 billion times as deadly as cyanide -- and a Web site run by a physicist and flying saucer enthusiast offers to sell you a trace amount of it for $69 and send it via the U.S. Postal Service or UPS.

Contrary to early news reports, polonium-210 -- the poison suspected in the death of an ex-Russian spy in England -- is not some exotic material available solely from nuclear laboratories. The isotope is available from firms that sell it for lawful and legitimate uses in industry, such as removing static electricity from machinery and photographic film.

If ingested in large enough amounts, polonium-210 causes a hideous death.

"This is not a way you'd want to die -- it's a very slow, painful death," said Kelly L. Classic, a radiation physicist at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., and the media liaison for the Health Physics Society, a national organization of experts on the health effects of radiation.

Polonium is an "alpha emitter," which, when it decays, emits high-speed volleys of subatomic alpha particles -- each one composed of two protons and two neutrons bound together -- that rip apart DNA coils and bust up the cells within which they reside.

An alpha particle "is huge on an atomic scale," Classic said. "If an electron was a piece of popcorn, the alpha particle (would be) like a bowling ball."

(Must be excerpted go to link)

(Excerpt) Read more at sfgate.com ...


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: callingartbell; conspiracy; lazar; mayoclinic; poison; polonium210
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To: GSlob
The amounts [if any] would be like americium in a smoke detector - traces of traces. Anything greater would run way more than $69. I am still looking for some old clock with radium painted dial - tritium gun sights go to half intensity in 11 years, but radium ones [glass encased] would last for centuries.

I was the RSO for a company, and people used to send me _things_ in the interoffice mail for disposal. They were bringing them in from home, and were careful to use a blank interoffice envelope. I resented it.

All kinds of stuff used to show up: The radium dial clocks, Corell Ware, OLD vaseline glass loaded with uranium (NOT like the recent stuff), WWII surplus lenses made with thorium flint glass that were BIG and hot, Coleman mantles, thoriated W TIG electrodes, etc..etc.

21 posted on 11/28/2006 4:56:21 PM PST by Gorzaloon ("Illegal Immigrant": The Larval form of A Democrat.)
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To: GSlob
looking for some old clock with radium painted dial

They say it is best not to orally moisten the tip of your brush when you refurb your sights.

22 posted on 11/28/2006 5:10:06 PM PST by DUMBGRUNT (islam is a mutant meme)
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To: GSlob
If you want to read a fascinating story about an enterprising Eagle Scout with a fascination for radioactivity, check it out. Just damn.
23 posted on 11/28/2006 5:22:10 PM PST by Sender ("Always tell the truth; then you don't have to remember anything." -Mark Twain)
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To: DUMBGRUNT

True, but one does not need to moisten anything at all. Grind a few granulae of old radium paint [under some inert solvent, like alcohol, so it does not dust], let the alcohol dry. Make some epoxy, smear it on one side of the sights glass inserts. dip each insert in the radium paint dust - it would stick to epoxy. allow to dry, and then cement the insert with the paint glued to one side into the sights cavities, so the paint is not even exposed, but is covered with glass at all times.


24 posted on 11/28/2006 5:30:14 PM PST by GSlob
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Comment #25 Removed by Moderator

To: Gorzaloon

Not quite. the amounts are pretty small, and half-life is much longer - centuries instead of months. The polonium stinkers chose optimal half-life- long enough to last from preparation to application, and short enough to hope that it would decay before being detected.


26 posted on 11/28/2006 5:43:28 PM PST by GSlob
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To: GSlob

Ottawa, IL, a bit west of me was once home to radium dial painting companies.
Local legend has it that some of the women painted their nails with the stuff for a fun night out. They did in fact moisten the brushes in their mouth.


27 posted on 11/28/2006 5:45:28 PM PST by DUMBGRUNT (islam is a mutant meme)
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To: psychoknk

polonium 210 has a half life of something like 100 days.

that means if you plan on killing someone, you need to have it "fresh"


28 posted on 11/28/2006 8:01:02 PM PST by staytrue
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To: GSlob
"...I am still looking for some old clock with radium painted dial - tritium gun sights go to half intensity in 11 years, but radium ones [glass encased] would last for centuries..."

How odd that you would mention that, GSlob! There was a story about two years ago about a High-School kid who got his hands on an old bottle of Radium paint, found inside an old clock. The story would have ended there, with any ordinary kid just painting things that glowed in the dark.

But this 13 year old senior was building a replica of an enrichment device as a science project, and decided to see if he could actually do it!

The details I remember are sketchy, but when the Haz-Mat people were done, the kid had a full-boat college scholarship, and his parents needed a new car and garage! Seems the re-rod in the floor was radioactive too.

I'll see if I can find that story and reference it for you. I would have kept it ... and I now realize that it was more like five years ago. Bookmarked - see ya later. Stay well..................FRegards

29 posted on 11/28/2006 9:36:48 PM PST by gonzo (I'm not confused anymore. Now I'm sure we have to completely destroy Islam, and FAST!!)
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To: psychoknk
Pardon me if I call shenanigans.

Get the brooms!!

30 posted on 11/28/2006 9:38:40 PM PST by eyespysomething
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To: GSlob

I think that's the story in #23.

Note to self: Read all posts before responding!

Stay well............FRegards


31 posted on 11/28/2006 9:48:09 PM PST by gonzo (I'm not confused anymore. Now I'm sure we have to completely destroy Islam, and FAST!!)
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To: gonzo

32 posted on 11/28/2006 10:08:46 PM PST by null and void (To succeed in life, you need three things: a wishbone, a backbone and a funnybone. --Reba McEntire)
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To: null and void
Yuppers! That's the kid. Pretty amazing story. I was trying to remember it, when I saw the reference to Radium.

Wow! When I had food poisoning in 2002, I really did screw-up my memory.

I'll never eat at that restaurant-that-shall-remain-unnamed again!

APPLEBEES!!

Stay well................FRegards

33 posted on 11/28/2006 11:46:49 PM PST by gonzo (I'm not confused anymore. Now I'm sure we have to completely destroy Islam, and FAST!!)
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To: gonzo
But this 13 year old senior was building a replica of an enrichment device as a science project, and decided to see if he could actually do it!

That's the famous "Atomic Scout" incident. He built a neutron source with radium and beryllium and then assembled uranium and thorium with it.

Radscout

34 posted on 11/29/2006 4:02:22 AM PST by Gorzaloon ("Illegal Immigrant": The Larval form of A Democrat.)
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To: conservative in nyc

Not clear that this particular substance could be mailed, but from the USPS website it appears that the flat prohibition applies only to mail via a class that can travel by air. Small amounts of some (but not all) radioactive materials can be mailed by surface mail with strict packaging requirements and activity limits.


35 posted on 11/29/2006 9:20:59 AM PST by GovernmentShrinker
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To: Sender
>>>If you want to read a fascinating story ...<<<

Yikes!

36 posted on 11/29/2006 10:18:46 AM PST by HardStarboard (Give Pelosi and Reid Enough Rope to Hang Themselves.)
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