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The Anthrax Murders Re-Visited
12/11/04 | vanity

Posted on 12/10/2004 1:15:38 PM PST by genefromjersey

A CNN story on 12/08/04 noted a Postal worker (a former one,let's hope)is now on trial - along with "militant" attorney Lynne Stewart, and Arabic language translator Mohammed Yousry - on charges of providing material support to a terrorist organization.

Ahmed Abdel Sattar , who goes by the "organizational nickname" of Abu Omar (or Abu Omar al-Masri) is a 45 year old Egyptian-born veteran of the Egyptian Army (1979-1981),who emigrated to the US in 1982-a jump or two ahead of Egyptian authorities,who sought him in connection to Muslim Brotherhood-linked activities.

Sattar married a Chicago woman (her citizenship status,etc. were not shown) in 1985,and began working for the Postal Service in 1988.(Again, the CNN report is lacking in data. Which Post Office did he work out of ?It almost had to have been one in the NY metropolitan area, because:

In 1990,Sattar met and joined forces with the "Blind Sheikh" Omar Abdel Rahman,who operated out of a "storefront" mosque in Jersey City,NJ,and had ties to Brooklyn,NY.Sattar began driving the Blind Sheikh around in 1992,and, in 1993, testified at an immigration hearing on the Sheikh's behalf.

While the Sheikh's status was being debated, the first World Trade Center bombing occurred,and it was learned the bombers had operated as part of a cell centered around the Sheikh's mosque.

Sattar himself was questioned by the FBI,and "swabbed" for explosive traces soon after the bombing,but was released for lack of evidence,when the swabs came back clean.

When the Blind Sheikh was arrested ,an angry Sattar told the Media: "We will hold the American Administration responsible.Something very bad could happen."

Sattar,it is alleged,conveyed messages to cell members while serving as a "paralegal" to the imprisoned Sheikh. He is also reported to have carried out orders of the Sheikh by writing letters to contacts in Afghanistan,endorsing an associate for employment there. The associate subsequently used his position to get near an Afghan leader al-Qaeda and the Taliban wanted killed,and to murder him.

Did Sattar have some connection with the anthrax murders as well? His "alias" suggests he is the equivalent of a tribal chief-("Abu" - sometimes spelled "Abou" is an honorific,applied to leaders.)-which,in turn,suggests there are followers: in other words, a cell.

Being an "insider" at a Postal facility could have given him considerable knowledge of the probable effects of anthrax-tainted mail...if,indeed,this was an al-Qaeda operation.

ITEM TWO on my list of "Things Needing Clarification" relates to the deaths from anthrax infection of Kathy Nguyen and Ottilie Lundren.

These deaths have been ascribed to "secondary mail contamination"-although detailed and exhaustive swabbing of the victims' homes, mailboxes,etc. turned up no trace of anthrax.

One explanation I've read suggests there was a wind-borne plume of anthrax. As I recall, the writer examined wind currents prevailing at the possible times of infection and guessed there was a possibility.

One major objection to this interesting hypothesis is the apparent lack of additional victims. Shouldn't there have been more ?

My question is: How do we know there were not more victims ??

If some of the victims were homeless "derelicts" sleeping in doorways,etc. at time of exposure,who would even think of anthrax exposure when they turned up dead later on ? How about senior citizens already in poor health ? "Throw-away children" in foster care or state-run institutions ? Absent signs of foul play,would any attending physician even consider anthrax infection ?

Finally, for "conspiracy buffs": Might the government have "covered up" additional anthrax cases in order to stem the existing panic ? ( I know I would have been tempted to do so !)


TOPICS: Anthrax Scare; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: anthrax; mailings; othervictims; postalworker
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To: okie01

okie,I believe her own central PO was contaminated;however-no traces of anthrax were found in her mailbox,anywhere in her house,or on her property. I BELIEVE they also checked out the letter carriers to see if there was anything in their bags,trucks, etc.


61 posted on 12/13/2004 4:26:44 AM PST by genefromjersey (So much to flame;so little time !)
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To: genefromjersey
That assumes, of course,there was a "plume". ( I've gotten a lot fonder of the plume in recent months.)

I'm not assuming a plume of any particular size or anything. Just the fact that the American Media building and at least one postal facility got contaminated indicate that handling anthrax in the form it was in the anthrax letters is going to spread it around.

Weaponized anthrax is insideous. It is designed to spread and infect as widely as possible. It really isn't plausible that two individuals were somehow targeted. The letters addressed to other individuals contaminated whole buildings. The odds that they were the only two affected by some otherwise unknown contamination or release of anthrax are astronomically against.

Odds are very strong that others were infected. They were either misdiagnosed, or the cases were covered up.

62 posted on 12/13/2004 5:45:06 AM PST by eno_ (Freedom Lite, it's almost worth defending.)
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To: Calpernia
Latest word is "all same thing". Remember, we have 3 years of investigation. Many stories put out there in the first year have been found to be false leads. The only reason they thought they had two different kinds of anthrax is one sample was very dry, and another sample was moist.

All the New Jersey focus starts with the cancelation marks and FBI "guesses" because of the large Middle Eastern population there.

63 posted on 12/13/2004 5:47:24 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: Calpernia

The packing tape article came out early in 2002. I thought it was quite interesting and just kept it in mind.


64 posted on 12/13/2004 5:48:04 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: genefromjersey

Proving, of course, that with really old people it only takes 1 spore!


65 posted on 12/13/2004 5:48:50 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: muawiyah
There were many more victims ~ thousands in fact! Thing is few of them died.

This is true for the places where releases of anthrax were known to have taken place.

The problem is the two "random" victims. They were not among groups of other people that had reason to take Cipro or a vaccine. One wonders how many misdiagnosed cases of pneumonia there were at the time.

66 posted on 12/13/2004 5:49:38 AM PST by eno_ (Freedom Lite, it's almost worth defending.)
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To: muawiyah

Would you mind explaining if there is a difference and what the difference is between a cancelation mark and bar coded?

And I thought I read that the anthrax had two different materials? Not just dry or moist?


67 posted on 12/13/2004 6:23:06 AM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: muawiyah

No, I agree, that is very interesting. I will try again to find it.


68 posted on 12/13/2004 6:23:48 AM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: muawiyah

>>>All the New Jersey focus starts with the cancelation marks and FBI "guesses" because of the large Middle Eastern population there.

I strongly disagree here. 9 of the hijackers had their fake ID paperwork from New Brunswick, NJ.


69 posted on 12/13/2004 6:24:42 AM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: muawiyah

This article does mention the tape. But don't forget, not all the letters were recovered. Also, this article suggests different anthrax or processes or something.

I hadn't seen this article before. Thanks for mentioning the tape so I could find it.



http://osborn-scientific.com/Anthrax%20Sent%20Through%20Mail%20Gained%20Potency%20by%20the%20Letter.htm

May 7, 2002
Anthrax Sent Through Mail Gained Potency by the Letter
By WILLIAM J. BROAD and DAVID JOHNSTON

Deepening the mystery of the biological attacks that terrified the nation last fall, federal investigators have discovered that the anthrax sent through the mail, in general, grew more potent from one letter to the next, with the spores in the final letter to be opened — the one sent to Senator Patrick J. Leahy of Vermont — the deadliest of all.

The finding has surprised and worried investigators, who say it poses a new riddle: was the culprit an amateur making gradual improvements through experimentation, a malevolent professional intentionally ratcheting up the potency of the germ powder, or someone else entirely?

It also suggests that after more than six months of painstaking effort, government experts investigating the anthrax strikes are still at sea. Part of the problem, they admit, is a lack of advisers skilled in the subtleties of germ weapons.

The discovery of the progressive potential deadliness of the anthrax is the latest conclusion of scientific testing that investigators are hoping will help crack a case that has baffled the F.B.I. since the first anthrax fatality: that of Robert Stevens, a photo editor at a Florida supermarket tabloid, who died on Oct. 5.

With five anthrax deaths linked to the contaminated mailings, the F.B.I. inquiry has consumed millions of hours of interviews, neighborhood sweeps and other detective work. For example, F.B.I. laboratory analysts matched the serrated ends of the strips of cellophane tape used to seal the anthrax letters. That meant that whoever sealed the letters, without leaving any fingerprints, tore off successive strips of tape from the same roll, officials said.

But investigators acknowledge that they still have no idea who is behind the tainted letters. So they are increasingly turning to science to unravel the mystery. Tests being conducted at several private laboratories may reveal the precise biological signature of the anthrax used in the mailings, helping to narrow the search for the laboratory from which it came.

Analyses of the anthrax sample and the chemicals used to coat it could leave telltale clues to the techniques and equipment used to manufacture the germ material.

Investigators previously believed that the anthrax sent to Mr. Leahy, the Democrat who is chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, and Tom Daschle, the Senate majority leader, were identical in strength. Each letter was mailed from Trenton on Oct. 9, 2001. Each had the same photocopied message inside.

But it turns out that the Leahy anthrax is finer, its spores having a smaller range of particle sizes, officials familiar with the federal investigation said.

"It could be that the final steps of the processing were done in steps," a senior government official said. "You take it so far, and take off a bunch. You go further, and take off another bunch."

Despite the increasing sophistication of the anthrax, investigators say they still judge that the deadly powder could have been made in any of thousands of biological laboratories, though getting the right starter germs would have been difficult.

An aide to Senator Daschle opened the letter on Oct. 15, and officials quickly warned that its anthrax was of high quality compared with earlier mailings, to news media offices in New York. The Leahy letter was impounded, along with all other Congressional mail, and was not discovered until Nov. 16. Investigators made painstaking safety and forensic preparations before opening it in early December.

The analysis of the contents of the Leahy letter is proceeding slowly, the investigators say, because they are learning the science as they go along and want to make sure that none of the scarce, lightweight but extremely valuable evidence is lost, corrupted or misinterpreted. They are getting help, they say, from scores of scientists across the nation.

"We'll have to take this into court," the law enforcement official said of the evidence. "We had to assure ourselves that we had a quality program."

A senior Bush administration official expressed sympathy for the F.B.I. because the inquiry had grown so scientifically complex and knowledgeable advisers are so few.

"They're having to review a lot of the initial takes on things," the official said. "There's an evolving picture. The bureau has gone back to scratch to invent the science."

It is sometimes hard even to do reappraisals. In the Florida case, no letter or residual powder was ever recovered, leaving many questions about the anthrax there.

Federal officials said the first wave of well-documented attacks with mailed anthrax — in letters from Trenton postmarked Sept. 18 to NBC News and The New York Post — was relatively crude. The powder was heavily contaminated, they said, with what biologists call vegetative cells — anthrax bacteria before processing in the laboratory turns them into hardened spores. Vegetative cells in dry anthrax powder are generally dead and therefore harmless, experts said.

By contrast, the tiny spores live in a dormant state. Individual ones are light enough to float easily in the air and, if inhaled, small enough to reach deep into human lungs, eventually germinating into bacteria and causing the respiratory form of the disease, which can be fatal. They can also cause the less dangerous cutaneous form if rubbed into the skin.

Last October, alarm bells rang when the Daschle powder was found to be nearly pure spores. The danger was driven home when nasal swabs came back positive for 28 people in the Senate Hart building, where the letter was opened.

The F.B.I. in early November characterized the Daschle powder as "much more refined, more potent, and more easily dispersed" than the New York media anthrax. The mailer's letters hinted at the danger. The media ones warned the openers to take penicillin. But the Daschle letter said flatly, "You Die Now."

As federal experts investigated the residual Daschle sample, they found the picture becoming fuzzier. On one hand, the concentration of the anthrax was extraordinarily high — roughly equal to that made in the abandoned American germ weapons program, a trillion spores per gram.

But federal experts now say the particles turned out to have a large size range. While single spores predominated, the experts said, some Daschle clusters ranged up to 40 microns wide — far too big to penetrate human lungs. A micron is one-millionth of a meter, and a human hair is 75 to 100 microns wide. The big clusters suggested the powder was far less than weapons grade.

Private experts disagree on just how much less. Ken Alibek, a former Soviet germ official who is now president of Advanced Biosystems, a consulting company in Manassas, Va., called the Daschle anthrax mediocre.

"It was not done with a regular industrial process," Dr. Alibek said in an interview. "Maybe it's homemade."

Recipes that antigovernment militia groups circulate at gun shows might suffice to make the deadly powder, he said.

But William C. Patrick III, a scientist who made germ weapons for the American military and is now a private consultant on biological defense, rated the Daschle anthrax as 7 on a scale of 10.

"It's relatively high grade," Mr. Patrick said, "but not weapons grade."

In addition to particle size, federal experts are investigating whether the anthrax powders have electrostatic charges that affect dispersal and chemical coatings meant to increase potency and shelf life.

Federal investigators saw the Leahy anthrax as an opportunity to clear up ambiguities and deepen the analysis. Since no powder had been lost in the letter's opening, they had more to work with. Still, the amount, typical of the tainted letters, was remarkably small — just 0.871 grams. A pat of butter weighs 10 grams.

Last week, government officials said the most recent analyses showed that the Daschle and Leahy powders were quite different, the latter finer and more uniform.

"You can characterize the Leahy as having a smaller particle range," one official said.

In general, he added, the ability of federal investigators to do deeper analyses because of the relatively large amounts of powder in the Leahy letter is producing "real interesting results."

A biologist aiding in the investigation said the increasing potency of anthrax in the letters might suggest that the attacker was a thief who stole several samples.

"Maybe he didn't pocket one vial but two or three, if we're assuming this was an opportunist," this scientist said.

Dr. Alibek raised another possible factor. The F.B.I., he said, needed to weigh the possibility that post office sorting machinery might have had an effect. "It could be an additional process of milling," he said, "like a mortar and pestle."

Experts said the Daschle and Leahy letters, starting at the same place in New Jersey on the same date and ending up at the same destination in Washington, appear to have taken similar if not identical postal routes. Dr. Alibek agreed but said the same sorter could apply more pressure to one letter than another. He added that the overall grade contrasts were probably caused by "different batches of the product, one more sophisticated than the other."

Investigators have also been studying the envelopes, officials say, and have found that the paper had very large pores — up to 50 microns wide. That is bigger than the largest Daschle anthrax clusters and suggests how the powder could easily escape individual letters to contaminate the general mails.

"It had to be one of the most porous materials," an official said of the attack envelopes compared with standard ones. "Whether that was by chance or design, I have no idea."


70 posted on 12/13/2004 6:33:28 AM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: Calpernia

This whole antrax event stinks to high heaven in the first place! At the expense of sounding like a tin foil hat wearing nut case, my gut tells me this is what occurred.

Why would any enemy of the United States want to kill lil' Tommy Daschle, Pat Leahy or bedwetting liberal nightly mouthpiece Brokaw?

Answer: They wouldn't!!!

Remembering back to the fall of 2001, Bush has 80% approval ratings, Tom Daschle, after years of weak defense policy by the Democrats is esmaculated and irrelevent. The Dems are in despair and ruination...

Suddenly, Daschle's office receives the letter and now the Dems are heroically fighting on the front lines of the War on Terror! We're right there with you NOW America!

My gut also tells me that these attacks originated from somewhere from deep within the colon of the DNC. Milquetoast Rove probably killed the investigation because even the slightest action by the Administration would be hysterically denounced as a Rove set up. The MSM would never allow the DNC to go quietly into the night.

Done venting, back to adjusting my antenna.


71 posted on 12/13/2004 8:47:34 AM PST by Wristpin ( Varitek says to A-Rod: "We don't throw at .260 hitters.....")
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To: Wristpin

>>>Why would any enemy of the United States want to kill lil' Tommy Daschle, Pat Leahy or bedwetting liberal nightly mouthpiece Brokaw?

I understand that train of thought. I have another one too.

IMO, it was a political threat. Or a warning. A reminder that their soles were sold and they had to pay the piper.

Hmmm, not sure how else to word that.


72 posted on 12/13/2004 8:52:29 AM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: Calpernia
And Virginia drivers licenses. Remember, those are just the identification materials recovered, either from the crash scenes, or from their personal belongings. They may have had even more stuff.

I am sure the FBI hasn't told us about all of it.

73 posted on 12/13/2004 9:37:41 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: Calpernia
Again, you are citing an article that says the letters were mailed from New Jersey.

This is always in error and proves the reporter did not fully "fact check" his article. No one really knows where the letters were mailed, just where some of them were canceled!

74 posted on 12/13/2004 9:39:22 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: Wristpin
The addresses on the recovered letters, formated exactly the way they were printed on those letters, to the same guys, were readily found on a website called www.jewsforlife.org. It was a right to life news article, and you were requested to send your comments to those people at those addresses.

Obviously someone wanted everybody to "blame the Jews" ~ a quite usual Arab ambition!

They had some other "blame the Jews" stories all prepared for the other 9/11 events as you recall.

75 posted on 12/13/2004 9:41:42 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: muawiyah

>>>Again, you are citing an article that says the letters were mailed from New Jersey.

Do you have or have you seen any articles that cited the letters being mail from other locations other than NJ? The AMI one was mailed from Florida, that has been stated. But what other references do you have to cite other than your opinion?

I would love to read them.


76 posted on 12/13/2004 10:24:17 AM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: muawiyah

>>>And Virginia drivers licenses. Remember, those are just the identification materials recovered, either from the crash scenes, or from their personal belongings.

Oh, I know what you are talking about. You are referring to the two Virginia Drivers licenses.

Yes, there were two Virginian addresses used; but the ID ring is/was here in NJ. Matter of fake, Toufiq Alfauru of Paterson, NJ was specifically charged for the Virginia IDs in Newark, 2003? 2002?

But the ID ring function(s)ed between New Brunswick and Paterson. The others involved in that ring haven't been paraded out in public yet.


77 posted on 12/13/2004 10:37:59 AM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: Calpernia

If the person addressing the envelopes could spell Leahy, Daschle, Russell, and Rockefeller, you would think they would have got "penicillin" right.


78 posted on 12/13/2004 11:00:09 AM PST by wideminded
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To: wideminded
The names and addresses were copied from a news article at www.jewsforlife.org. They even included the strange format that put "bldg" below the line.

The folks filling out the addresses didn't need to know how to spell.

79 posted on 12/13/2004 5:04:06 PM PST by muawiyah
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To: muawiyah
The names and addresses were copied from a news article at www.jewsforlife.org.

I hadn't heard this. If true, it answers my other question, which is why a relatively obscure senator such as Leahy was targeted.

80 posted on 12/13/2004 7:30:46 PM PST by wideminded
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