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Whatever Happened With The Anthrax Killer?

 
 
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 06:55 am
Has anyone heard if the person(s) responsible for sending the anthrax letters in 2001 was caught? Did we ever figure out where they came from?

Or, was the whole incident just flushed down the memory hole?
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Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 2,464 • Replies: 31
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shewolfnm
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 06:58 am
i think the secret service hired him.....
0 Replies
 
Bi-Polar Bear
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 07:00 am
Re: Whatever Happened With The Anthrax Killer?
squinney wrote:
Has anyone heard if the person(s) responsible for sending the anthrax letters in 2001 was caught? Did we ever figure out where they came from?

Or, was the whole incident just flushed down the memory hole?


place your bets ladies and gentlemen...
0 Replies
 
freedom4free
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 07:07 am
Did ya have to mention it, especially during Bush's low approval rating ?

Quote:
Apr. 22, 2006

Anthrax inventory doesn't add up at lab
Two vials with the bacteria may be missing. State health officials said it's most likely that clerical error is to blame.


By Kristen A. Graham and Kaitlin Gurney
Inquirer Staff Writers

Two vials of a deadly bacteria may be missing from a government lab in Trenton - or officials might simply have miscounted, they said yesterday.

Over the last three weeks, officials have been readying samples from the Trenton Distribution Center - a postal facility in Hamilton where anthrax-laced letters were discovered in 2001 - for a move to a new, safer bioterrorism facility.

An inventory turned up 350 two-inch test tubes of liquid-encased anthrax spores, when 352 should have been on site at the New Jersey Public Health Environmental Laboratory where the anthrax has been stored since its removal from the postal facility.

"We think that at the end of the day, it's going to be basically a transcription error, or there wasn't an exact logging to what came in," said Eddy Bresnitz, New Jersey deputy commissioner of health and senior services. "We don't think it's going to turn out to be missing inventory."

Bresnitz and Fred Jacobs, the head of the state health department, believe that a discrepancy is likely because a more thorough count was performed in advance of the move to the new lab a short distance away.

Bresnitz said he could not explain why a more exhaustive count was not performed earlier.

For now, the state has notified the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the FBI, and the public of the potentially missing vials.

"We don't think there's any threat to the public's health," Bresnitz said. "The way we have it stored, it can't be used in its current form as a weapon of mass destruction."

In order for the samples to be weaponized, a person would have to have highly specialized knowledge and equipment and take several steps, he said.

Officials said that 11 people had access to the samples, all of whom had photo ID, access cards and a padlock key. The 11 - research scientists and microbiologists - also had FBI background checks and were interviewed after the discrepancy was discovered.

The lab has a 24-hour security guard and is monitored by video cameras, as well.

Another count is under way, and state officials expect to release a report analyzing what happened to the anthrax on Wednesday.

Four letters containing anthrax were mailed through the Hamilton postal facility in September and October of 2001. Four workers at the regional processing center and one postal carrier were sickened, though all recovered.

Five people died nationwide.

Letters were sent to NBC News, the New York Post, U.S. Sens. Tom Daschle (D., S.D.) and Patrick Leahy (D., Vt.), contaminating the Hart Senate Office Building.

No arrests have been made.

Fumigating and restoring the Hamilton facility cost an estimated $100 million and took more than three years.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/local/14401671.htm


Its ok they have been found. Pheew!

Quote:
Thu, May. 04, 2006

2 vials of anthrax found in state lab
They had been reported missing last month. The problem turned out to have been a labeling error.

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/local/states/new_jersey/14498577.htm
0 Replies
 
xingu
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 07:19 am
I heard one right wing nut case on A2K claim Saddam Hussein did it and we should have attacked him immediately.
0 Replies
 
squinney
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 07:24 am
Was it not such a big deal afterall for us to not find who did it?

I'd hate to think there was some kinda conspiracy within the government, or something.
0 Replies
 
Wolf ODonnell
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 07:29 am
Phew, that's a relief. Still, I don't remember anybody being arrested over those anthrax attacks either...
0 Replies
 
DrewDad
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 07:32 am
As I recall, the prime suspect was found dead by the side of the road.
0 Replies
 
squinney
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 07:37 am
Anthrax Killer At Large - December 2004 Washington Post
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Brandon9000
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 07:43 am
My impression was that they had looked hard for him, investigated a few people, but that in the end, they couldn't figure out who had mailed the letters.
0 Replies
 
gustavratzenhofer
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 07:48 am
This may be just a rumor, but I have heard from reliable sources that the anthrax dude is none other than our very own Brandon.
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Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 07:54 am
Gus, check your mail, you may already be a wiener.
0 Replies
 
Brandon9000
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 07:58 am
From the Wikipedia:

Quote:
As of 2006, the anthrax investigation seems to have gone cold. Authorities have traveled to four different continents, interviewed more than 8,000 individuals and have issued over 5,000 subpoenas. The number of FBI agents assigned to the case is now 21, ten fewer than a year ago. The number of postal inspectors investigating the case is nine.


Wikipedia
0 Replies
 
squinney
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 09:03 am
Looks like they are really serious 'bout this Homeland Security thing. I mean, ANTHRAX! Bio-weapon grade!

Really no big deal, right?

It's not like it'll happen again.
0 Replies
 
Magginkat
 
  1  
Reply Sat 6 May, 2006 08:55 am
Brandon9000 wrote:
My impression was that they had looked hard for him, investigated a few people, but that in the end, they couldn't figure out who had mailed the letters.


Of course they 'forgot' to check out 1600 Pennsylvania Av.
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kelticwizard
 
  1  
Reply Thu 8 Jun, 2006 02:20 am
Considering that there is very, very limited availabilty to anthrax, it is hard to believe that they would not have tracked the fellow down by now.

The Unibomber was a lone wolf, but he had internet access to bomb making equipment plus a career as a math professor to figure it all out.

The anthrax killer obtained something which can certainly be traced to just about anyone who had access to it, yet after several years we are told investigators have no clue.

Despite the small number of people who had access to it. Hard to believe.
0 Replies
 
Finn dAbuzz
 
  1  
Reply Fri 14 Jul, 2006 11:29 pm
For an interesting fictional account of the sort of person Amerithrax might be and how he might be able to avoid capture, you might try Greg Bear's Quantico.

The possibilities are very many.

One (not from the book) is that he is now a desiccated corpse in some remote location, having succumbed to the micro-critters with which he was playing, and committed suicide rather than seek medical care that would have unquestionably lead to his arrest.

It's difficult to imagine that the anthrax attacks of 2001 were merely a test of the capabilities of an organized foe of the US. If they were part of a test, it was, by a number of measures, successful and should have led to additional attacks on a larger scale.

It's possible that the attacker's entire stock of weaponized anthrax was used up in October of 2001, hence no follow-up attacks. I may be giving these hypothetical folks more credit than they deserve, but it seems that the amount of anthrax used in the 2001 attacks could have been more "effectively" used.

It's pretty hard to construct a conspiracy theory involving the US government that makes any sort of sense.

The tired old saw that Bush & Co wanted to stir up a great degree of fear (and thus compliance) just doesn't wash. There was no need to stoke the fears of the American people one month after 9/11. If the military, the CIA or some ultra-secret black ops unit wanted to test weaponized anthrax, it would have been far easier to do it in a third world country.

It's also possible that it is one of the people that the FBI has investigated. While unable to get the goods on him as respects the 2001 incidents, their surveillance has prevented any additional attacks.

It is a fascinating mystery.

Surely most Americans expected a continued series of anthrax attacks after the ones in 10/01, but then we also expected more 9/11's.
0 Replies
 
gungasnake
 
  1  
Reply Tue 25 Jul, 2006 09:19 am
Re: Whatever Happened With The Anthrax Killer?
squinney wrote:
Has anyone heard if the person(s) responsible for sending the anthrax letters in 2001 was caught?



That would be Saddam Hussein. He WAS caught hiding out in a foxhole and is presently being tried for being an a$$hole, and will probably hang or otherwise be executed.

The first anthrax cases were in the exact neighborhood of the 9-11 hijackers including the husband of a lady renting a room to one of them, and the last previous case of anthrax in a human in America was 30 years prior to that.

The Czechs are sticking with their story of Mohammed Atta meeting with Hussein's top spy a month or so prior to 9-11, and Hussein is the only person on Earth who ever had anthrax as sophisticated as that used to poison the US senate office building.

Oh, yeah, the white guy the FBI wanted everybody to believe did it...

The guy told the fibbies that if he was stupid enough to have done that, then either he would be dying of anthrax as they spoke, or he'd have the serum antibodies in his blood, and he offered to take a blood test on the spot, their facilities or one available to him, and they had no answer to that.

Any American who had anything to do with anything like that would be behind bars by now.

We needed to go into Iraq the day after 9-11 and we were not able to because of the state which Slick KKKlintler had left the military in; it took a year and a half of rebuilding. Naturally, nobody in the government wants to talk about the US having ever been in such a state and for that reason the thing about the anthrax attacks has been pretty much buried.
0 Replies
 
squinney
 
  1  
Reply Tue 25 Jul, 2006 04:52 pm
Well, that's interesting, Gunga. How do you suppose the letters got mailed by Atta 3 and 4 weeks AFTER he died in a plane crash?
0 Replies
 
gungasnake
 
  1  
Reply Tue 25 Jul, 2006 07:15 pm
squinney wrote:
Well, that's interesting, Gunga. How do you suppose the letters got mailed by Atta 3 and 4 weeks AFTER he died in a plane crash?


Possibly by other members of the team who didn't fly that day.
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