Two police officers who rushed to the side of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter after they were attacked with a nerve agent have spoken in detail for the first time.
Sergeant Tracey Holloway and PC Alex Collins, from Wiltshire Police, began their shift just an hour and 15 minutes before Mr Skripal and his daughter Yulia collapsed on a park bench in Salisbury on March 4.
The pair have now said 'we were very lucky' there were not more casualties in the Novichok attack - and admitted something 'didn't feel right' when they arrived.
Tracey Holloway and Alex Collins, from Wiltshire Police, began their shift just an hour and 15 minutes before the Sergei Skripal and his daughter collapsed on a park bench on March 4 (Pictured, military personnel in protective suits and gas masks working on the scene in March)
Bourne Hill police station was recovering from a busy week of heavy snowfall when Sgt Holloway received a medical call for two officers to attend the Maltings shopping centre at 4.15pm.
PC Collins, a police medic, said it took the officers two minutes to get to the scene on lights and sirens, the Guardian reported.
They drove through the pedestrianised area of the city centre and across a bridge where they found Skripal's daughter, Yulia, on her side.
A member of the public, a doctor, was maintaining her airways when the pair arrived - PC Collins believes this may have saved her life.
He said: 'The male was in a very unusual position. He was sat on the bench, rigid, catatonic, staring into space. He was breathing but totally unresponsive. We tried to help medically and to find out what had happened. Our first thought was that it was drugs.'
The officer put on gloves to handle the patients, but Holloway remembers examining Sergei Skripal's wallet with her bare hands.
The pair have now said 'we were very lucky' there weren't more casualties in the Novichok attack
A cordon was in place within minutes, and police pushed people far away from the scene as they endeavoured to uncover what had been the cause of the incident.
The officers then examined the pair's possessions further, finding unfamiliar names in a situation they said 'wasn't quite normal'.
Collins said: 'We looked at their wallets to try to find their ID. There was a phone with Russian writing on it. The names weren’t familiar. That was strange. It didn’t feel right. It wasn’t quite normal.'
Other detectives went to the Skripal house at the other end of Salisbury - where UK authorities said the highest concentration of Novichok was found.
It was here that an officer, Detective Sergeant Nick Bailey, was left critically ill after coming into contact with the nerve agent after it was sprayed on the door handle.
Neither Collins or Holloway, who attended the scene at the Maltings, noted suffering any illness after coming into contact with the Skripals.
PC Collins, a police medic, said it took the officers two minutes to get to the scene on lights and sirens
Sergei Skripal (pictured) and his daughter Yulia were targeted with the nerve agent Novichok in a failed assassination attempt
But, concerned by the lack of information about the Skripal's illness, Holloway called firefighters in hazmat suits to work on the scene around the park bench.
Collins then went off shift and said instinct told him to change his clothes - which he left in his garage. He then received a phone call two days later telling him to bring his kit, his clothes, his watch, wallet and mobile phone to the station.
The officers only heard that Novichok was involved from media reports after Mr Skripal's name emerged on March 5.
But, like most, the pair feared the victims would not recover. Collins said: ' When I heard that Yulia had woken from her coma I was elated. The fact that both recovered was brilliant. It meant the attackers didn’t succeed. Lives were saved.'
Other detectives went to the Skripal house at the other end of Salisbury where one of them, DS Nick Bailey, was left critically ill after becoming exposed to Novichok at the property
Both Collins and Holloway knew Charlie Rowley and Dawn Sturgess, who were poisoned three months later after finding a bottle of the nerve agent disguised as a perfume bottle.
Ms Sturgess, 44, died in hospital a short time later and Charlie Rowley, 45, remained critically ill following his exposure.
Mr Rowley, who has suffered several strokes and is losing his eyesight, was eventually discharged from hospital before becoming critically ill again with meningitis.
But for Holloway, the attack hit even closer to home, as the Skripal house was close to her property.
She described going 'home to a crime scene' and said she never really felt she left the situation at work.
Collins put on gloves to handle the patients, but Holloway remembers examining Sergei Skripal's wallet with bare hands
But the pair said they were both proud of the job the police did on March 4, and Holloway thanked her team for their work that day.
Both Collins and Holloway said police were lucky they didn't have more casualties that day.
It comes after Detective Sergeant Nick Bailey described of the 'emotional battering' he has suffered after he became an accidental victim of the attempt to kill the former spy.
The Wiltshire Police officer said last month: 'I describe it as emotional battering and psychological impact.
'It's taken longer to deal with just because of everything that has happened to us. Not only did we lose the house, we lost all of our possessions, including everything the kids owned, we lost all that, the cars.
'We lost everything. And yeah it's been very difficult to kind of come to terms with that.'
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News Pictures Officers who were first to reach Sergei Skripal and daughter say something 'didn't feel right'
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