Posted on 02/04/2004 7:29:52 AM PST by The_Victor
WASHINGTON - A new link is emerging between letters containing the poison ricin found in mail facilities that serve the White House and a South Carolina airport as federal investigators seek to identify the letter or parcel that may have carried ricin into a Senate mailroom. A senior law enforcement official, speaking Tuesday on condition of anonymity, said investigators had established strong links between the South Carolina and White House letters. What remained unclear, the official said, was whether those letters were connected to the substance found in the office of Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn.
The letter found in October at a postal facility serving the Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport was signed by someone who called himself "Fallen Angel," as was a letter found in November at a facility that processes mail for the White House, a law enforcement official said. Both letters complained about new regulations requiring certain amounts of rest for truck drivers. Both also contained ricin.
Investigators said Tuesday they had not identified the letter or package that might have carried ricin into Frist's office. An initial check found no extortion, threat or complaint letter in the office, said a second law enforcement source also speaking on condition of anonymity.
There were no indications of involvement by foreign terrorists such as al-Qaida, which the FBI (news - web sites) has said is interested in using ricin in an attack.
The powdery white substance was found on a machine that opens mail in Frist's office, authorities said. The area in the Tennessee senator's office was quarantined and stacks of mail were to be checked.
"We have an open mind about the source of this," said Terrance Gainer, chief of the U.S. Capitol Police, which is conducting the probe along with the FBI and the multi-agency joint terrorism task force based at the FBI's Washington field office.
Gainer said authorities were interviewing members of Frist's staff and others who had access to the mailroom. Although it was considered remotely possible that the ricin was physically planted in Frist's office, investigators were concentrating on mail as the likely source.
The package found in a South Carolina mail facility had a letter claiming the author could make more ricin and a threat to "start dumping" large quantities if his demands to stop the new trucking regulations were not met. The FBI offered a $100,000 reward in that case but no arrests have been made.
The White House letter, intercepted in November, contained nearly identical language but such weak amounts of ricin that it was not deemed a major health threat, said another law enforcement official. That letter's existence was not publicly disclosed before Tuesday.
At the Capitol, an FBI hazardous materials team was helping police isolate and examine the mail in Frist's office and will in the coming days collect other unopened mail in the Capitol complex, said FBI spokeswoman Debra Weierman. The FBI also will do forensic analysis at its laboratory in Quantico, Va., checking evidence for fingerprints, fibers, hair and the like.
The latest discovery comes as the FBI continues its 28-month-old investigation into the fall 2001 mailings of anthrax-laced letters to Senate and news media offices. Five people died and 17 were injured in that attack.
The anthrax investigation is ongoing, FBI spokesman Ed Cogswell said. Twenty-eight FBI agents and 12 postal inspectors are assigned full-time to the anthrax case, which has involved some 5,000 interviews and issuance of 4,000 subpoenas.
The FBI has focused recently on an intensive scientific effort to determine how the spores were made and narrow the possibilities in terms of who had the means to make them. Authorities have many theories on who might be responsible, ranging from al-Qaida terrorists to a disgruntled scientist to an expert who sought to expose U.S. vulnerabilities to bioweapons attacks.
The one man named a "person of interest" by authorities, Dr. Steven J. Hatfill, says he has nothing to do with the attacks and has sued the government for publicly identifying him. Hatfill is a former government scientist and bioweapons expert who once worked at the Army Medical Research Institute of Infections Diseases at Fort Detrick, Md.
Umm....you are capable of, say, reading articles and such, aren't you?
We've had two recent Ricin mailings, the second to the white house, by a guy claiming to own a trucking company who is upset about regulations restricting the hours a driver can drive.
You think that's Al Queda or Iran or something?
It sounds like the Frist stuff may be a copy-cat, an inside job or evidence of gross stupidity by someone in the mail-handling chain. If it's the latter, and -- after all the anthrax hysteria -- someone nonchalantly opened a vial or package containing powder, and then threw the container away, all the expensive detection equipment or pre-screening in the world won't save the Congress from terminal stupidity.
We've had two recent Ricin mailings, the second to the white house, by a guy claiming to own a trucking company who is upset about regulations restricting the hours a driver can drive.
I think his point is that we cannot afford to assume that these attacks are purely domestic. And just because the mailing is domestic, doesn't mean that the actual source is too. Even some Americans can be bought.
Err, just like the Anthrax attacks...oops, wait, because those seemed to be from Muslim terrorists, you're not allowed to question at all if the notes were "real."
However, any note connected to terrorism that DOESN'T have a connection to Islam or an Islamic country is fake? Gotcha.
And the reality of Ricin is that there are probably 50 million people in the country who have the intelligence and financial wherewithal to make Ricin. It's probably easier than building a Meth lab, and tens of thousands of dumbass white trash tweakers have done that in their trailers.
Boy, the irony is rich on this one.
Anyone posting "we cannot afford to assume this attack was from Muslim terrorists" in regard to the Anthrax mailings, despite the letters connected to the attacks, they'd get flamed viciously.
Well, that argument has in fact been made both here and by the FBI, and validly so (without flames). A domestic terrorist wanting to cover his tracks would obviously try to throw off investigators with a poorly written (with respect to the English language) letter included with the toxin.
Please note that I said "we cannot afford to assume that these attacks are purely domestic." It just means that we should not assume that just because there is an apparent trail to S.C., because it may not be what we think.
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