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Georgia arrests two over plan to sell radioactive substance
by AFP Staff Writers
Tbilisi (AFP) April 16, 2021

Georgia has arrested two men for attempting to sell nearly $360,000 worth of a radioactive substance, security services said Friday, the latest in a series of such plots in the Caucasus nation.

The men were arrested in the ex-Soviet republic's second-largest city of Kutaisi as they attempted to sell a container of americium-241 for 300,000 euros ($359,400), Georgia's state security service said in a statement.

They face up to 10 years behind bars.

Americium-241 is the most prevalent isotope of americium in nuclear waste and is commonly found in smoke detectors.

It is produced when plutonium absorbs neutrons in nuclear reactors or during nuclear weapons tests, according to the US Environmental Protection Agency.

Extremely toxic and radioactive, the isotope poses a health risk when ingested or inhaled.

Concerns have grown over the past decade that extremists can get hold of unsecured radioactive materials in the former Soviet Union.

Georgia and neighbouring Armenia have reported numerous cases of their nationals attempting to sell radioactive substances.

Since 2003, Georgia has foiled several attempts to smuggle weapons-grade uranium.

In March 2019, its security services stopped two men in the Black Sea resort of Kobuleti from trying to sell radioactive uranium for $2.8 million.


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DARPA's SIGMA Program transitions to protect major US metropolitan regions
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On a blustery winter day last December, a car carrying radioactive material approached one of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey's major transportation hubs. As the car got closer, an alarm flashed and sounded on a large monitor in the police operations center, identifying on a digital map the exact location of the vehicle and the specific radioactive isotope radiating from the car - Cesium-137. Within minutes, officers in the Port Authority Police Department - equipped with vehicle-mou ... read more

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