Posted on 03/09/2007 8:41:11 AM PST by jpl
(CBS) They followed him. They brought bloodhounds into his home. The attorney general identified him to the world as a "person of interest" in the first major bioterrorism attack in the nation's history.
But five years after letters sent through the U.S. mail containing anthrax killed five and injured 17, the FBI has yet to charge Dr. Steven Hatfill. In 2003, he sued the government.
The resulting depositions of FBI personnel and law enforcement records obtained by 60 Minutes provide an inside look into one of the FBI's biggest investigations ever and raise the possibility that the bureau may have a cold case on its hands.
Correspondent Lesley Stahl's report, which contains revelations from those depositions, will be broadcast this Sunday, March 11, at 7 p.m. ET/PT.
Hatfill, a scientist who worked at an Army laboratory where the strain of anthrax used in the attacks was stored, is the only "person of interest" named publicly in the case. He has maintained his innocence all along.
Hatfill is suing the government for destroying his reputation by, among other things, naming him "a person of interest." According to depositions taken for Hatfill's suit and obtained by 60 Minutes, the FBI official who oversaw the investigation says the bureau was looking at many more people.
"There were 20 to 30 other people who were also likewise identified as 'persons of interest' in the investigation,' " the FBI's Richard Lambert says under oath.
60 Minutes has learned that today at least a dozen of those other people still have not been eliminated as so-called "persons of interest."
Hatfill charges in his suit that the FBI leaked information about him that was distorted and damaging. After the deadly mailings, evidence-sniffing bloodhounds reportedly "went crazy" at Hatfill's apartment, according to a Newsweek story.
60 Minutes has learned that the bloodhounds reacted similarly at the home and office of another scientist, too. And two of the dogs have been wrong on a number of occasions, including a serial rape case in which a man in California was arrested and jailed, based largely on the evidence from the dogs. He was ultimately exonerated with DNA evidence.
To quell the leaks, FBI Director Robert Mueller instituted a tactic known as "stovepiping," whereby the various squads assigned to the case stopped sharing information with one another.
In his deposition, the FBI's Lambert said he opposed Mueller's order because barring investigators from exchanging information " would inhibit our ability to 'connect the dots' in a case of this magnitude " just as it had leading up to 9/11.
Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, agrees that stovepiping undercut the investigation. He also charges that the FBI used the leaks to cover a lack of progress in the case.
"I believe they wanted the public to believe that they were making great progress in this case," he tells Stahl. "It's just turning out to be a cold case."
60 Minutes has also learned that the FBI's biggest hope to crack the case turned out to be a dead end created by one of its own investigators.
Early on in its investigation, the bureau was able to lift trace amounts of DNA from one of the envelopes used in the attacks. Agents hoped this forensic evidence would hold the key to solving the crime. But the amount of DNA recovered was so minute the bureau decided not to test it, fearing that doing so would use up the sample without yielding results.
The FBI then improved its DNA-testing technology so it could accurately test the microscopic sample. They then discovered that the DNA belonged to one of its own investigators who had contaminated the envelope.
Like I said, you don't know how the postal system works ~
LOL!!! No, it was not, and you obviously do not read a thing posted to you. Over 7000 in NY were OFFERED, you said they were given it and tried to come off as if 10's of thousands had to take it, that is clearly not what happened. Enjoy the color of sky where ever you're at.
This particular stable (National Enquirer, Star, etc.) is written to about an 8th grade level ~ that's so they can maximize their audience ~ that brings in foreigners with limited understanding of English.
Now, if you were an AlQaida terrorist and you wanted to find out what the most important newspaper in America might be you would....... what?
Maybe you would observe that National Enquirer is found at every cash register outlet at every grocery store in the country.
If you had limited understanding of the publishing industry ~ maybe extending no further than to having seen the local newspaper office in your home country printing it on site for example ~ you might well believe that if you attacked the headquarters with anthrax that all the newspapers coming out on Monday would be contaminated, and that all those people who read it while standing in line would die Tuesday, which would be 9/11.
The idea that the anthrax attackers went after what they thought was America's most important newspaper was arrived at by noticing that the only other newspaper attacked was ALSO in tabloid format.
The NYTimes, the Tribune group of papers, the Washington Post, Time, Newsweek, USNews, etc. were not targeted.
Just about everybody on Capitol Hill working for Congress had it available.
Things may have been different in New York ~ maybe someone was trying to balance the fire department's budget by holding back CIPRO.
how did the anthrax team sync up with the timeline of Atta's team - to conduct the mailings around the same time as 9-11?
and where are they, do they have any more anthrax?
Thanks for the ping, now let me catch up with the thread.
....JJ61
Hence you make my argument for me and CHANGE your verbiage. 10's of thousands did NOT take CIPRO they were OFFERD IT. Exposure to the places where it was is not exposure to Anthrax. The spore has to be breathed in for the symptoms to develop, several DID die from this and that is not argued, what IS argued is the delivery method...it stunk, it will do very little for the effort, especially now with may mail, shipping and other such facilities having detections like the ones we have in the military.
Just about everybody on Capitol Hill working for Congress had it available.
And Dept, of state and DOJ and more...VERY FEW TOOK IT. You just can't seem to admit that.
Things may have been different in New York ~ maybe someone was trying to balance the fire department's budget by holding back CIPRO.
What an idiotic and vapid line, it smacks of sour grapes whining. As for the money, I would not know, I simply fought fires and answered to on scene calls when called, that was between deployments in the military.
Every person in the United States had a smaller chance of being exposed in that manner but one elderly lady in Connecticut died due to cross-contamination.
I knew many people who'd done nothing but visit a building that had a small amount of contamination and they elected to take CIPRO for many months.
The question was whether or not the CIPRO was handed out like candy ~ not if folks actually took the stuff. Many walked off with it to use later if necessary.
I certainly would not have waited for symptoms to appear if I'd thought I'd been in contact with contaminated equipment. I knew where to pick it up at work, and with no questions asked.
As far as you needing more personal information in regard to CIPRO use, I don't know anyone who admitted to using it as a suppository.
Does that satisfy your curiosity?
There's another story on the net that suggests Atta actually attempted a Presidential assassination just days before this attack ~ again, down in Florida.
9 pounds? where is it, still stored in somebodies refrigerator in Florida?
Now, at this late date, you have to pay to get that info. Some of it is little more than raw FBI reports, the very stuff which became impossible to get once the investigation was "stovepiped".
Many of us who work the anthrax threads began to feel that someone inside the FBI at a high position was suppressing the investigation. Turned out that was true ~ FBI Director Robert Mueller was the bad actor. His actions set the anthrax investigation back years.
What in God's name are you even trying to say here? You're not even making any sense.
Also, you sound like you want some personal testimonials to the way CIPRO acts on the human system.
Just to let you know I do know people who had their teeth loosened by CIPRO ~ they used it because they were exposed to heavy concentrations of anthrax.
So, you're saying that, even though they were in Florida at the time, the 9/11 hijackers put New Jersey return addresses on the envelopes, they mailed the anthrax letters in Florida before the 9/11 attacks, and by pure coincidence the letters didn't get postmarked in Florida but got shipped by a miraculous mistake to New Jersey where the media letters got into the mail system on 9/18, while somehow the senate letters sat around somewhere in New Jersey for three more weeks until they got into the mail system on 10/9?
Have I got that right?
This is a perfect example of something that cannot be proven "impossible" but is so wildly ridiculous that it totally defies belief by anyone with any intelligence.
Now, at this late date, you have to pay to get that info.
That's probably not true. I collected every article I could find about the anthrax attacks and put them on my site. Occasionally, I'd learn about one I'd missed and by looking up key words, I could usually find it somewhere on the Net and then add it to my site.
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