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On 12 March 2018, UK's prime minister Theresa May announced that it is highly likely that the nerve agent with which former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter were poisoned on British soil earlier that month came from Russia. Four days later, the self-styled honest news web site The-Postillion.com reported a shocking development in the case — namely, that investigators had found Russian president Vladimir Putin's passport at the scene of the crime: The article closed with the claim that the British government gave the Russian Federation 24 hours to extradite their president to London. But although it is true that the governments of England, France, Germany, and the United States have all pointed the finger at Russia as the likely perpetrator of the 4 March 2018 attack, which left its intended victims in critical condition and harmed several others, including people who came to the aid of Skripal and his daughter, no physical evidence has come to light directly linking Putin to the crime. Russia has denied any involvement in the crime. No reports of Putin's (or anyone else's) passport being discovered at the scene appeared in mainstream news sources, and for good reason: It's false and preposterous. The Postillion is a satirical web site whose content, according to a disclaimer on the site's FAQ page, is entirely fictional and for entertainment purposes only: Among the other tongue-in-cheek scoops published on the site are articles reporting that the White House was fitted with a revolving door to facilitate staff turnover, and that President Trump announced he will deport Native Americans back to India.
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