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Keyword: bruceivins

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  • Committee formed to review FBI anthrax investigation

    07/02/2009 11:33:39 AM PDT · by Justice Department · 6 replies · 770+ views
    fredericknewspost ^ | July 02, 2009 | Justin M. Palk
    The public has 20 days to comment on the makeup of an independent committee being assembled to study the science the FBI used in its investigation into the 2001 anthrax mailings. The 14 provisional members of the National Academy of Sciences study committee include medical doctors, chemists, microbiologists and a U.S. District Court judge. The academy will consider public comments on the proposed committee membership before finalizing the roster. The FBI requested the study last year, after critics questioned the validity of the science it used in matching the anthrax used in the 2001 mailings with that in a flask...
  • USAMRIID RMR records – Dr. Bruce Ivins’ flask 1029 two documents don’t match

    07/25/2009 8:38:53 AM PDT · by TrebleRebel · 9 replies · 1,466+ views
    Case Closed ^ | 7/25/09 | Lew Weinstein
    USAMRIID RMR records – Dr. Bruce Ivins’ flask 1029 two documents don’t match ****** I have now received new documents, from DXer, in addition to the previously redacted copy of the RMR-1029 records that I posted here (* Dr. Bruce Ivins RMR-1029 inventory records, from 1997 to 2003, pursuant to a FOIA request) on June 26. One of the new documents is an unredacted copy of the above, showing names and locations of where aliquots of RMR-1029 were shipped to. The other document is the ORIGINAL working document of 1997 when there was still 1000ml in the flask and no...
  • Anthrax investigation still yielding findings[Bruce Ivins]

    02/26/2009 6:32:39 AM PST · by BGHater · 15 replies · 2,364+ views
    Nature ^ | 25 Feb 2009 | Roberta Kwok
    Chemical composition of spores doesn't match suspect flask. The deadly bacterial spores mailed to victims in the US anthrax attacks, scientists say, share a chemical 'fingerprint' that is not found in bacteria from the flask linked to Bruce Ivins, the biodefence researcher implicated in the crime. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) alleges that Ivins, who committed suicide last July, was the person responsible for mailing letters laden with Bacillus anthracis to news media and congressional offices in 2001, killing five people and sickening 17. The FBI used genetic analyses to trace the mailed spores back to a flask called...
  • Boca Raton Publisher Targeted In Anthrax Hoax

    02/24/2009 11:52:38 AM PST · by Justice Department · 10 replies · 1,396+ views
    cbs4.com ^ | Feb 22, 2009
    Investigators are trying to determine who sent a suspicious letter to a Boca Raton publishing company that was targeted in 2001 in a deadly anthrax attack. Friday the offices of American Media Inc., which publishes the National Inquirer, the Sun, Star magazine and other grocery store tabloids, were evacuated for about 45 minutes after a letter containing a white powder arrived at the company. Police were able to determine the powder was harmless. Sun photo editor Bob Stevens, 63, died in October 2001 was the first fatality from the anthrax attacks that killed four others and harmed 17 from Florida...
  • Suicided "Anthrax Mailer wrote song for teacher Christa McAuliffe killed in space shuttle explosion.

    12/21/2008 12:57:44 PM PST · by JoeProBono · 14 replies · 1,603+ views
    In February 1986, the scientist who FBI officials now say was behind the anthrax mailings that killed an Oxford woman and four others, applied for a U.S. copyright for a song about the death of New Hampshire schoolteacher Christa McAuliffe, killed when the space shuttle Challenger exploded. Bruce Ivins' application for "Christa's Song (Reach for the Stars)" was denied. According to authorities, Ivins committed suicide as he was about to be indicted in connection with the 2001 anthrax attacks.
  • Scientific impossibility: Did FBI get their man in Bruce Ivins?

    11/17/2008 7:46:08 AM PST · by TrebleRebel · 29 replies · 3,326+ views
    Baltimore Examiner ^ | 11/16/08 | Deborah Rudacille
    Scientific impossibility: Did FBI get their man in Bruce Ivins? By Deborah Rudacille Examiner Correspondent 11/16/08 Bruce Ivins was a cold-blooded murderer, a deranged psycho-killer, who in the fall of 2001, cooked up a virulent batch of powdered anthrax, drove to Princeton, N.J., and mailed letters loaded with the lethal mix to five news organizations and two U.S. senators. At least, that’s what the FBI says. The letters infected 22 people, killing five, including two Maryland postal workers. The sixth victim of the madness was Ivins himself, a 62-year-old biodefense researcher at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious...
  • FBI Seeks Anthrax-Scare Culprit

    10/24/2008 10:36:28 AM PDT · by Prunetacos · 55 replies · 2,702+ views
    The FBI has posted a $100,000 reward for help in finding who sent identical letters containing what turned out to be a harmless white powder to banking offices across the country. All 50 letters, which were sent between Oct. 17 and 18, were postmarked Amarillo, Texas. FBI today released the text of the letters on its Web site: "STEAL TENS OF THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE'S MONEY AND NOT EXPECT REPERCUSSIONS. IT'S PAYBACK TIME. WHAT YOU JUST BREATHED IN WILL KILL YOU WITHIN 10 DAYS. THANK (Redacted) AND THE FDIC FOR YOUR DEMISE."
  • FBI won't release details on anthrax suspect

    10/03/2008 12:06:54 AM PDT · by BGHater · 5 replies · 800+ views
    McClatchy Newspapers ^ | 30 Sep 2008 | Marisa Taylor
    The FBI is declining to release at least 15,000 pages of documents related to the now deceased prime suspect in the 2001 anthrax attacks despite lingering suspicions that the bureau has accused the wrong man. In August, the FBI and Justice Department identified Bruce Ivins, a former microbiologist at the U.S. Army's biological weapons research center at Fort Detrick, Md., as the "only person involved" in the attacks that killed five people and terrorized the nation. But David M. Hardy, the section chief of the FBI's records management division, notified McClatchy that his office could not immediately release the records...
  • Documents: Ivins bragged he knew anthrax killer

    09/24/2008 4:49:48 PM PDT · by Justice Department · 17 replies · 1,510+ views
    AP ^ | 1 hour ago
    WASHINGTON (AP) — Bruce Ivins, the Army scientist accused of carrying out the 2001 anthrax attacks, e-mailed himself last year saying he knew who the killer was, according to court documents unsealed Wednesday. "Yes! Yes! Yes!!!!!!! I finally know who mailed the anthrax letters in the fall of 2001. I've pieced it together!" Ivins wrote in the e-mail dated Sept. 7, 2007, according to an FBI affidavit. "I'm not looking forward to everybody getting dragged through the mud, but at least it will all be over," Ivins allegedly wrote. "Finally! I should have it TOTALLY nailed down within the month....
  • The oversight joke - Mueller stonewalls at anthrax hearing

    09/16/2008 2:31:52 PM PDT · by Prunetacos · 10 replies · 751+ views
    salon. ^ | Tuesday Sept. 16, 2008 | Glenn Greenwald
    FBI Director Robert Mueller is testifying before the House Judiciary Committee today, currently live-streamed on C-SPAN. An article this morning in The Washington Post dramatically touted the hearing as one in which, as the headline put it, "Lawmakers Are Seeking Answers in Anthrax Case -- FBI's Mueller to Be Queried by House Panel About Evidence Against Researcher." The article itself claimed that "the strength of the government's evidence against Bruce E. Ivins . . . will be tested anew today when FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III appears before the House Judiciary Committee" .....Mueller won't provide the Committee with even...
  • Rep. Bartlett skeptical that Ivins sent anthrax

    09/12/2008 5:13:06 PM PDT · by Prunetacos · 4 replies · 495+ views
    examiner ^ | Sep 12, 2008
    Rep. Roscoe Bartlett is ridiculing part of the FBI's explanation for the 2001 anthrax attacks. And the Maryland Republican says he's skeptical about the agency's conclusion that biodefense researcher Bruce Ivins grew the anthrax in his laboratory at Fort Detrick in Frederick and then mailed it to unsuspecting victims, five of whom died......
  • The FBI's Investigation of Bruce Ivins and Its Conclusions

    09/05/2008 5:27:29 PM PDT · by ZACKandPOOK · 89 replies · 1,745+ views
    The FBI's Investigation of Bruce Ivins and Its Conclusions Marilyn W. Thompson, Pulitzer Prize-winning Investigative Reporter and Editor for The Washington Post She talks of the "big remaining holes" in the case against Ivins. The scientific analysis led to a flask which was the parent of isolates accessible to a 100 plus known people. The press has filed a motion seeking to unseal the evidence filed in the case from the start. The first caller perhaps is Professor Frances Boyle (perhaps not but I strongly suspect it is), a local law professor there with definite political views and his own...
  • FBI Frame-up of Bruce E. Ivins Made Simple

    08/30/2008 9:34:24 PM PDT · by Prunetacos · 43 replies · 8,426+ views
    On Wednesday, August 8, 2008, the Department of Justice held a news conference announcing that Bruce E. Ivins, a former anthrax researcher for the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute for Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID), was the sole person responsible for the 2001 anthrax attacks. Headed by U.S. Attorney Jeffrey Taylor and FBI Assistant Director Joseph Persichini, the presentation was noteworthy for often not answering relevant questions, but instead referring reporters to several dozen court documents they had just been provided. After hurriedly reading one of these documents I decided to hedge my strong conclusion in an essay that the FBI had...
  • If not Ivins ...(Bruce Ivins had nothing to do with preparing or sending the anthrax letters)

    08/29/2008 7:25:37 AM PDT · by Prunetacos · 85 replies · 1,717+ views
    fredericknewspost. ^ | August 29, 2008 | Katherine Heerbrandt
    When Norm Covert, a conservative former Fort Detrick public affairs officer, and attorney Barry Kissin, liberal activist opposing Detrick's biolab expansion, agree that Bruce Ivins was not the anthrax killer, either the world's spinning off its axis, or the truth is staring us so hard in the face we'd have to be blind to miss it. Covert's piece this week in thetentacle.com establishes what many in our community, including scientists and support staff at USAMRIID, past and present, know: Bruce Ivins had nothing to do with preparing or sending the anthrax letters. --
  • A Trained Eye Finally Solved the Anthrax Puzzle

    08/21/2008 10:10:54 PM PDT · by neverdem · 20 replies · 723+ views
    NY Times ^ | August 21, 2008 | NICHOLAS WADE
    When the Federal Bureau of Investigation announced it had cracked the long-unsolved anthrax case, the turning point cited by the bureau was its identification of a laboratory flask as the source of the anthrax. The dots, or in this case more than a thousand separate anthrax samples, were connected with the help of a group of scientists working secretly for some seven years. They succeeded by using a combination of new techniques not even invented in late 2001 when the anthrax-laced letters were sent, and that most old-fashioned attribute of expert scientists and detectives: a trained eye. Now, in their...
  • FBI had, then tossed anthrax type used in attacks

    08/18/2008 4:29:04 PM PDT · by Shermy · 31 replies · 659+ views
    AP ^ | August 18, 2008
    FBI Assistant Director Vahid Majidi said Monday the initial anthrax sample that Ivins took from his Army lab in February 2002 and gave investigators did not meet court-ordered conditions for its preparation and collection. In a briefing for reporters, Majidi said the sample kept at the FBI lab was destroyed because the bureau believed it might not have been allowed as evidence at trial. "Looking at hindsight, obviously we would do things differently today," Majidi said. He gave investigators a second sample of anthrax from his lab in April 2002 to comply with standards in a subpoena issued in the...
  • F.B.I. Will Present Scientific Evidence in Anthrax Case to Counter Doubts

    08/15/2008 6:43:33 PM PDT · by Shermy · 44 replies · 532+ views
    New York Times ^ | August 15, 2008 | Eric Lichtblau and David Johnston
    WASHINGTON — ...F.B.I officials say they are confident that their scientific evidence against Dr. Ivins, who killed himself last month as the Justice Department was preparing an indictment against him, will withstand scrutiny, and they plan to present their findings for review by leading scientists. But the scrutiny may only raise fresh questions. The bureau presented forensics information to Congressional and government officials this week in a closed-door briefing, but a number of listeners said the briefing left them less convinced that the F.B.I. had the right man, and they said some of the government’s public statements appeared incomplete or...
  • Anthrax scientist Bruce Ivins slipped under the radar because of FBI obsession

    08/14/2008 5:34:58 PM PDT · by Shermy · 14 replies · 495+ views
    FBI P.R. Dept. (aka Los Angeles Times ^ | August 14, 2008 | David Willman
    WASHINGTON -- As federal authorities pursued the wrong suspect in the deadly anthrax mailings of 2001, they ignored or overlooked a series of early clues that pointed to Army scientist Bruce E. Ivins, a review of investigative records by the Los Angeles Times shows. ...* Genetic analysis by outside scientists published in May 2002 reported that anthrax powder recovered from the mailings most likely came from Ft. Detrick, or it was grown from a sample that originated there. "I would have felt very confident at the time that the top place to look was at Ft. Detrick," said Jonathan A....
  • Anthrax hair samples don't match

    08/13/2008 5:38:47 PM PDT · by ZACKandPOOK · 116 replies · 1,443+ views
    Washington Post ^ | August 13, 2008 | Carrie Johnson
    Wednesday the Senate Judiciary Committee announced it would call FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III to appear at an oversight hearing Sept. 17, when he is likely to be asked about the strength of the government's case against Ivins. A spokeswoman for Sen. Charles Grassley, R- Iowa, a vocal FBI critic, said he would demand more information about how authorities narrowed their search. The House Judiciary panel, meanwhile, is negotiating to host a separate oversight hearing in September with bureau officials, in a session that could mark the first public occasion where Mueller faces questions about the FBI's handling of...
  • Army to review USAMRIID security

    08/09/2008 10:43:53 AM PDT · by JZelle · 2 replies · 209+ views
    FrederickNewsPost.com ^ | 8-9-08 | From Staff Reports
    Frederick officials welcomed the announcement Friday of an Army review of security measures at Fort Detrick, while a local peace activist called it a charade. A team of military and civilian experts is being formed in the wake of accusations by the FBI that former Fort Detrick microbiologist Bruce Ivins was behind the 2001 anthrax attacks that killed five and injured 17. Ivins died of an apparent suicide July 29. Army Secretary Pete Geren has asked at least a dozen military and civilian officials to scrutinize safety procedures, quality controls and other policies and practices at the United States Army...