"He told me he was going to blackmail or sell sensitive information about all kinds of powerful people, including oligarchs, corrupt officials and sources in the Kremlin," she said. "He mentioned a figure of 10,000 pounds they would pay each time to stop him broadcasting these FSB documents.
"Litvinenko was short of money and adamant that he could obtain any files he wanted," she said.
The file he was most excited about, she told the Observer, related to the takeover of Yukos Oil by the Russian state -- a mysterious tax sale, never fully understood, under which the bulk of the private firm's assets came under the ownership of state-owned Rosneft oil company.
Former Yukos executive Leonid Nevzlin, who fled Russia to Israel when it became clear he was also facing imprisonment, has said Litvinenko recently flew to Israel to give him potentially incendiary documents relating to Yukos and the Russian authorities.
"Alex had information on crimes committed with the Russian government's direct participation. He only recently gave me and my attorneys documents that shed light on the most significant aspects of the Yukos affair," Nevzlin said in a statement.
Nevzlin said he had passed the documents on to British authorities and had been requested not to discuss their specific contents.
A Moscow court in 2004 issued an arrest warrant charging Nevzlin with organizing a double contract killing and a string of attempted murders, but the former executive says it is part of the same alleged campaign to target Yukos executives and critics of the Putin government.
Meanwhile, an Italian security consultant who also met Litvinenko on Nov. 1, the probable day of the poisoning, Mario Scaramella, released a statement over the weekend saying he believes he and Litvinenko were jointly targeted as a result of information the two had been sharing over the last several months. Scaramella has also tested positive for polonium exposure, though doctors said he did not yet show any symptoms of radiation toxicity.
"I have reason to believe that my poisoning and that of Litvinenko is connected to the information that for months the same Litvinenko was passing me," Scaramella said in a statement released through his lawyer.
Scaramella said tests showed that he had significantly lower traces of the radioactive substance than was the case with Litvinenko, "but they were still considered to be potentially lethal, and therefore capable of killing me."
Scaramella was working with an Italian-based commission looking into possible past connections between Russian intelligence services and Italian politicians. Commission members have said they found evidence that the former Soviet Union ordered the attempted assassination of the late Pope John Paul II in 1981 and the 1978 killing of onetime Prime Minister Aldo Moro by the Italian militant group the Red Brigades.
But Italian news reports, some quoting wiretapped conversations between Scaramella and Sen. Paolo Guzzanti, a member of former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's right-wing Forza Italia party, have suggested that there may also have been political motivations to the inquiry aimed at finding connections, before elections eight months ago, between current center-left Prime Minister Romano Prodi and the KGB.
kim.murphy@latimes.com