Bulgarian umbrella

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Speculative design of the weapon
  1. Trigger in umbrella handle
  2. Umbrella handle
  3. Spring to push linkage system
  4. Linkage system linking trigger to valve
  5. Cylinder of compressed air
  6. Switch that activates valve
  7. Valve that fires ricin pellet through the 'barrel' of the umbrella.

A Bulgarian umbrella is an umbrella with a hidden pneumatic mechanism which injects a small poisonous pellet containing ricin. It has a hollowed stalk in which the pellet neatly sits.

Such an umbrella was used in and named for the assassination of the Bulgarian dissident writer Georgi Markov on 7 September 1978[1] (the birthday of the Bulgarian State Council chairman Todor Zhivkov, who had often been the target of Georgi Markov's criticism) on Waterloo Bridge in London. Markov died four days later. It was also allegedly used in the failed assassination attempt against the Bulgarian dissident journalist the same year in the Paris Métro. The poison used in both cases was ricin. Both assassination attempts are believed to have been organized by the Bulgarian Secret Service of the time of the Cold War with the assistance of the KGB.[2]

Such an umbrella was intended to be used in the assassination of Pallo Jordan and Ronnie Kasrils by the South African Civil Cooperation Bureau death squad.[3]

Cultural influence[]

These two cases inspired:

  • A similar needle, in a suitcase, was used in the 1966 movie The Quiller Memorandum to inject a sedative into George Segal's leg - Segal played the titular Quiller character.
  • The episode "Hot Ice" of Quincy, M.E. (1978)
  • The Markov case was referenced directly, and a similar assassination method used, in the 1979 novel The Green Ripper by John D. MacDonald.
  • The French film Le Coup du parapluie (The Umbrella Coup) directed by Gérard Oury and starring Pierre Richard (1980)
  • The episode "At All Costs" of The Sandbaggers (1980)
  • Two episodes of the British political comedy series Yes, Minister / Yes, Prime Minister, where in "The Death List" (1981) the titular Minister Jim Hacker is told of various risks by methods of assassination, and in "A Diplomatic Incident" (1987) a Bulgarian Umbrella is suggested as a way to kill a French puppy that was intended as gift to the Queen, to prevent a diplomatic incident caused by quarantine regulations
  • Bulgarian writer Stefan Kisyov's novel The Executioner (2003)
  • The episode "Seven Thirty-Seven" of the American crime drama Breaking Bad (2009)[4]
  • The episode "Obsession" of NCIS (2010)
  • The episode Marionette of Fringe (2010)
  • The episode "The Clock" of The Americans (2013)
  • The 2022 Steven Soderbergh thriller Kimi features a public injection of an unknown sedative using the tip of an umbrella.

See also[]

  • Francesco Gullino, alleged Bulgarian umbrella murderer
  • MythBusters "Exploding Toilet" – the feasibility of this type of assassination was confirmed in the first episode of MythBusters.

Further reading[]

References[]

  1. ^ Holdsworth, Nick (23 March 2013). "Prime suspect in Georgi Markov "umbrella poison" murder tracked down to Austria" – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
  2. ^ Richard Edwards, Crime Correspondent (19 June 2008). "Poison-tip umbrella assassination of Georgi Markov reinvestigated". Telegraph.co.uk.
  3. ^ "How an assassin bungled a deadly umbrella plot". 16 August 2013.
  4. ^ "Bulgarian umbrella - Gadgets Now". Gadget Now.
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