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Behind In The Biowar (Antrax Expert Disappeance Mystery, Death of Another Top Expert,etc)
Government Executive Magazine, AP, Boston Globe, NYTimes,Various Others ^ | December 1, 2001 | Katherine McIntire Peters

Posted on 11/24/2001 12:50:38 PM PST by t-shirt

December 1, 2001

Behind In The Biowar

By Katherine McIntire Peters

kpeters@govexec.com

History’s deadliest weapons are making a comeback, and the public health system is far from ready to deal with them.

hen a group of Mongol invaders besieged a Genoese trading colony on the Black Sea in 1346, they devised an ingenious way to clear the city. They lobbed the corpses of plague victims over the city walls, unleashing destruction far beyond the range of their catapults. The Genoese lucky enough to escape by sea to Sicily brought the deadly plague bacteria with them. Before the decade ended, the Black Death, which had already ravaged China and the Middle East, swept across Europe, killing as much as half the population.

When historians look back on the emergence of inhalation anthrax as a weapon in the fall of 2001, they won’t see an anomaly, but rather the continuation of a pattern. The history of warfare and the history of disease are intertwined. A century after the Black Death ravaged Europe, smallpox, spread innocently at first but later with deliberation, played a pivotal role in the European conquest of the New World, killing 80 percent of the indigenous population in some areas. During World War II, Japan used biological weapons against a dozen Chinese cities, killing an estimated 10,000 people.

Anthony Cordesman, an expert on terrorism and biological warfare at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, says the anthrax attacks on Americans that started in October shouldn’t be particularly surprising. “It’s certainly dramatic that we’ve come under biological attack for the first time. It’s dramatic that it has been sustained and that the targeting has been well-chosen and sequential, so that there has been a steady cumulative buildup in the impact. But it’s difficult to say some new threshold has been crossed.”

What is clear, Cordesman says, is that the United States is not well prepared to deal with the consequences of terrorism involving biological agents. “This isn’t a contingency anymore, it’s a reality. We have to plan for that and we have to have a serious defense and response capability. That’s very different from dealing with this as something that might happen.”

The daunting nature of defending against and coping with a germ attack is obvious. In early October, after a Florida man died of anthrax and it became clear that others in New York and Washington had been exposed to the deadly bacteria, government officials were caught off guard by the overwhelming demands of the outbreak. The news media and the public had an insatiable appetite for information, and when government officials couldn’t provide it, plenty of “experts” were standing by to fill the gap. The result was a proliferation of conflicting and often erroneous information, some of it put out by government officials themselves. Laboratory scientists began operating around the clock in a valiant effort to keep pace with the growing demand for anthrax tests. Doctors prescribed antibiotics for thousands of Americans, sometimes as much to ease panic as to protect against the threat of anthrax.

Adding significantly to the stress and confusion was the fact that much of what officials thought they knew about how anthrax is spread and how it affects human health was based on research done years ago under very different circumstances. The infection of photo editor Robert Stevens in Florida was the first case of inhalation anthrax in the United States in 25 years. Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson publicly declared the case was “isolated,” and speculated that Stevens had contracted it drinking from a stream—information that quickly proved false. Likewise, just days before two postal workers in Washington died of the disease, experts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that anthrax spores found in a letter to Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., posed so little threat to postal workers they did not need to be tested for the disease.

Retired Gen. Dennis Reimer, former chief of staff of the Army and now the director of the Oklahoma City Memorial Institute for the Prevention of Terrorism, says the learning curve is steep when it comes to bioterrorism, and public officials need to be very careful about what they present as fact. “The American people will stay with the government while [officials] are working their way through some tough problems, if we say we don’t know the answer yet. Where you start to get into trouble is where you say one thing and it turns out to be another. This whole thing about communicating with the American people is a very big issue. The challenge the government faces is how do you communicate the seriousness of the event without causing panic. We haven’t had a lot of experience with that.”

But as shocked and outraged as government officials are over the anthrax threat, many privately say the situation could have been much worse. As awful as anthrax is, it is not contagious. If it is diagnosed early enough, it is treatable. Many experts fear the future will bring far worse incidents of bioterrorism, and they worry that federal agencies, state and local health officials and ordinary Americans won’t be prepared.

Growing Threat

Biological agents—the bacteria, viruses and toxins that are the building blocks of disease—have a long and uneven history as weapons. They are notoriously deadly, potentially more so than nuclear weapons. They are relatively easy to obtain—hundreds of laboratories around the world have inventories of deadly pathogens. And compared to other weapons designed to kill masses of people, biological weapons are inexpensive to produce. But they are difficult to deploy reliably. Stabilizing biological agents and deploying them covertly, without endangering the perpetrator, requires expertise not widely held.

In the early 20th century, many nations began extensive experiments with biological weapons. The United States was a relative latecomer to the field and didn’t begin serious research on germ warfare until the middle of World War II. The potential to inflict damage on an adversary was obvious; less clear was how to protect one’s own troops from disease while spreading it among the enemy. Because the technical challenges of deploying biological weapons on the battlefield were so great, the prevailing attitude among American war planners was that the military value of these weapons was marginal. In addition, the fact that nations were engineering ways to deliberately spread diseases while scientists around the world were devoting their lives to wiping out some of the same diseases became increasingly untenable among many world leaders.

Amid growing doubts, President Richard Nixon ended the U.S. germ warfare program in 1969. Then, in 1972, the United States and the Soviet Union, along with more than 100 other nations, signed the Biological Weapons Convention. Signatories agreed to end their germ warfare programs, although they retained the right to continue research into defensive measures against such weapons. The United States destroyed its stockpile, along with most, if not all signatories, except for the Soviet Union. The Soviets, U.S. officials later learned, continued their germ warfare program with a vengeance, developing tons of anthrax and the bacteria that cause botulism, plague and other deadly diseases, even loading some agents into missiles aimed at American cities.

U.S. intelligence agencies learned of the germ warfare program in the late 1970s, but the full scale of the program was not known until 1992, when Ken Alibek, its deputy director, defected to the United States. Alibek’s claims about the extent of the Soviet program were so shocking that some military and intelligence personnel believed he was exaggerating. As U.S. officials began to substantiate Alibek’s statements through scientific exchange programs in the 1990s, the reality began to sink in—the United States’ defensive capabilities were no match for the germs engineered by the Soviets.

Military officials were already worried about Iraq’s biowarfare program, however. In the buildup to the Persian Gulf War it became painfully clear to military commanders that U.S. and allied troops were vulnerable to a germ attack from Iraq. Taking out Iraqi President Saddam Hussein’s crop-dusting fleet—Iraq was believed to have tested how to spread anthrax with crop dusters—was a top priority in the early air strikes of the war.

In 1999, Alibek published Biohazard(Random House Inc., New York), a detailed account of Soviet successes in engineering antibiotic-resistant versions of some of the world’s oldest, deadliest diseases, including anthrax, smallpox and viruses causing hemorrhagic fever. Today, Alibek is researching ways to boost the immune system to defend the body against infectious disease. In October, he signed a contract with the National Institutes of Health to conduct cellular research that could lead to defenses against anthrax.

“I cannot unmake the weapons I manufactured or undo the research I authorized as scientific chief of the Soviet Union’s biological weapons program,” Alibek says. “I do what I can to mitigate their effects.” But many of Alibek’s former colleagues are believed to be working in Iraq, Syria and other of what the State Department calls “nations of concern.” The collapse of the Soviet Union put thousands of germ warfare scientists out of work, dozens of whom are believed to be actively involved in foreign weapons programs.

Unheeded Warnings

“Ken Alibek warned us two years ago that America was not taking the bioterrorism threat seriously,” says Curt Weldon, R-Pa., a senior member of the House Armed Services Committee. Weldon has long advocated programs to boost preparedness against unconventional threats, but he acknowledges that part of the reason federal programs have been inadequate and poorly managed is lack of leadership on the part of Congress.

“Today in Congress there are over 26 separate committees and subcommittees that oversee funding for homeland defense—all with separate jurisdictions. We must change that. We must coordinate that and modify the way we oversee the spending of tax dollars so that [local officials] have a clear way of obtaining resources to implement the required actions to deal with the threat,” Weldon says.

A number of laws and presidential directives in recent years have attempted to strengthen defenses against the proliferation and use of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons of mass destruction and boost the nation’s preparedness to deal with the aftermath of an attack. In 1996, Congress passed the Defense Against Weapons of Mass Destruction Act, which required the Defense Department to train local and state officials most likely to be first to respond to such an attack. The same year, Congress passed the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act, which authorized the attorney general to provide training and equipment for improving the capabilities of metropolitan fire and emergency service departments to respond to terrorist attacks. The two laws increased the federal role in ensuring state and local preparedness, but to many officials, they also increased confusion about division of responsibilities among levels of government at a time when the threat of bioterrorism was becoming increasingly apparent.

Long before anthrax started showing up in mail rooms across the country, federal officials understood that the risk to civilians of a biological attack was as great or greater than the risk to military personnel. In a July 1997 interview with Government Executive, David Franz, who was then commander of the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases at Fort Detrick, Md., said battlefield threats are easier to defend against than terrorist attacks against civilians, especially those involving biological weapons. “The opportunity to prepare for a specific terrorist incident will be extremely rare—much like preparing for an emerging disease outbreak. Unless we happen to have excellent intelligence, we can only be prepared to respond after the fact,” Franz said.

The Army institute is the only facility in the United States where medical research is conducted to develop drugs and vaccines that can counter the use of biological agents that have been engineered for use as weapons. But despite the growing biological threat and the institute’s critical role in medical research, its funding and staff have been cut by nearly one-third over the past decade, even as anti-terrorism programs proliferated across the federal government as a result of the 1996 legislation.

A number of studies have shown that federal bioterrorism training programs are redundant, poorly coordinated among departments, and confusing to state and local officials. Amy Smithson, a chemical and biological warfare expert at the Henry L. Stimson Center, a national security think tank in Washington, says the federal role has been counterproductive. “Dozens of federal entities have been fiercely competing for the missions and money associated with the unconventional terrorism response, an unfortunate circumstance that has resulted in redundant capabilities, wasteful spending and, at the local level, confusion as to which agency would spearhead the federal component of a response,” Smithson says.

In “Ataxia: The Chemical and Biological Terrorism Threat and the U.S. Response,” an October 2000 report co-written by Smithson, she writes that the federal government’s lack of preparedness for dealing with bioterrorism is inexcusable: “The minute the U.S. government had knowledge that another nation had not only weaponized contagious biological agents . . . but also had a doctrinal concept of attacking an opponent’s civilian populace, then it was incumbent upon Washington to throw U.S. biodefense programming into high gear to safeguard the health of soldiers and civilians alike.

“Confirmation of the U.S. government’s intelligence about the Soviet biowarfare program began with high-level defections in the late 1980s and early 1990s, yet Washington did not escalate efforts to develop new licensed vaccines and stockpile existing vaccines until 1996 and 1998, respectively. Nor did the government make any move to resuscitate the country’s long-neglected disease surveillance system until 1998,” Smithson wrote.

Federal preparedness programs are a “fractured mess,” Smithson wrote. Federal agencies seem more intent on securing larger budgets than in devising coherent, integrated plans to defend against and respond to a terrorist attack, she says. “An absurdly small slice of the funding pie has made it beyond the Beltway.”

Health Care Crisis

Nowhere are the gaps more apparent than in the public heath system, which operates more like a loose collection of like-minded organizations than an integrated system. The challenge posed by bioterrorism is that it is highly unlikely an attack will be perceived at the time it happens. Instead, people will start getting sick and begin seeking care from their private physicians or local hospitals and clinics. A pattern of illness may not become apparent for weeks. If the disease is contagious, it would likely spread exponentially, eventually overwhelming the local medical system.

That’s what happened during two recent national exercises designed to test the health care system’s response to a biological attack. An exercise in June 2000 simulated the release of plague in Denver, while another exercise a year later simulated the release of smallpox in several cities. The results were clear: In both cases the medical system collapsed, the public lost faith in government officials and the disease spread like wildfire.

Reimer helped plan the smallpox exercise, called Dark Winter. He says it was designed to test the range of issues officials would face-such as how to legally quarantine people across different jurisdictions, how to distribute a limited number of antibiotics and vaccines, and how to keep public order in the face of mass hysteria. Some exercise participants estimated that the hypothetical outbreak would have resulted in 1 million deaths.

“It was a worst-case scenario to force people to deal with some of the policy decisions they would have to deal with if smallpox was introduced,” Reimer says. But it doesn’t take a worst-case scenario to see serious gaps in health care.

The nation’s response to annual bouts of influenza offers a clear warning to those concerned about preparedness for terrorists wielding infectious disease as a weapon. The flu is predictable and vaccine is widely available prior to the onset of flu season. Nonetheless, 20,000 Americans die annually as the result of flu, and flu season nearly always stresses hospitals beyond their capacity. For years, health care officials have been warning of the possible emergence of a more deadly flu virus for which vaccine will be ineffective—something akin to the 1918 influenza pandemic that killed 20 million people worldwide, including 550,000 Americans—in which case hospitals couldn’t come close to caring for all those who would come down with the disease.

It’s also instructive to consider the outbreak of West Nile Virus in New York City in 1999. Local, state and federal laboratories were overwhelmed for months while they were inundated with requests for tissue analyses of hundreds of ailing patients, who were experiencing swelling of the brain, disorientation and other unusual symptoms. At the same time, hundreds of birds were dying across the city—they were carrying the West Nile Virus, it turned out, although it took months for officials to recognize the link. What was worse, more than 20 patients were admitted to metropolitan hospitals before one doctor reported the strange outbreak to the city’s public health department.

After New York public health officials notified the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, the CDC initially misidentified the disease, which is common in the Middle East and Africa, but had never been seen in North America. Given that the outbreak occurred in New York City, which has what is widely believed to be one of the best public health systems in the country, officials elsewhere worried about how they would have fared in a similar situation.

According to the General Accounting Office, the CDC received only $155 million for bioterrorism preparedness programs in 2000—out of a federal counterterrorism budget of nearly $10 billion. About $40 million of CDC’s budget was awarded to state and local health departments for surveillance, epidemiology, laboratory work and communications programs. Officials agree that much more is needed if public health officials are to recognize and identify disease outbreaks soon after they occur.

Dr. Tara O’Toole, deputy director of the Center for Civilian Biodefense Studies at Johns Hopkins University, told an audience at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in August that the nation’s 5,000 hospitals are poorly equipped to handle even relatively minor disease outbreaks. During flu season in 1999, for instance, three-quarters of the Los Angeles emergency rooms were so full for 10 days they had to re-route ambulances to other facilities. The Maryland Secretary of Health found that Baltimore, home to two major medical centers and medical schools, could not handle even 100 people needing to be put on ventilators overnight.

The fact that authority for public health is vested in the states poses a serious problem in the event of a bioterrorist attack, said O’Toole. “CDC has to be invited in to do anything in the states, although CDC certainly has the expertise that we would want to use in the event of an epidemic,” she said. “State and local health care departments are not necessarily well-glued together either, and there is a big disconnect between the public health system and the medical system. Doctors do not think to call their local public health officer when they find an infectious disease.”

What’s more, few physicians are trained to diagnose the pathogens thought to be most likely used as bioweapons. “Most American doctors have not seen anthrax or smallpox or pneumonic plague,” she said.

The conventional wisdom is that only one in 10 cases of infectious disease is reported to public health officials. Even when doctors think to call their local health department, there might not be anybody there, she said. “People in public health departments do not have beepers; they do not have computers on their desks for the most part. When there was an outbreak of Cryptosporidiosis, [an intestinal infection caused by a parasite] in Milwaukee a few years ago that eventually sickened 400,000 people, the Milwaukee Health Department did not have one fax machine. They had to walk down the hall and borrow one, ironically, from the Office of Economic Development,” O’Toole says.

All things considered, public officials handled October’s anthrax outbreak pretty well, says Cordesman. But the situation highlighted the weaknesses of the bioterrorism response system.

“We were warned again and again by public health officials that the system was inadequate and that they’d have to improvise and that there were many areas where we simply didn’t know what to do and we’d run out of resources very quickly,” says Cordesman. “We’ve spent a long time slowly weakening the public health system, and we ended up paying for it.”


TOPICS: Breaking News; Crime/Corruption; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: biowarfare; smallpoxlist
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Pray for America.

Take note the the FBI is not making it a priority to investigate the disappearance of one of the top experts in the world on biological germs, outbreaks and attacks.

Please read all the stories I will be posting on this thread. I could not post them at the time because of the large number of words.

1 posted on 11/24/2001 12:50:38 PM PST by t-shirt
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To: archy; Patriot76; Alamo-Girl; Freedom007; Uncle Bill; FormerLurker; sarcasm; Mercuria; AnnaZ...
Connecticut woman's anthrax death still a mystery, authorities say

November 24, 2001 Posted: 04:22:00 AM PST

By DIANE SCARPONI, Associated Press

OXFORD, Conn. (AP) - Investigators were pessimistic that a quick explanation would be found for the mysterious anthrax death of an elderly Connecticut woman earlier this week. Preliminary testing of her house and nearby post offices showed no signs of the bacteria.

Gov. John G. Rowland said more testing was under way but the lack of a definite source for the anthrax, while a relief for postal workers, has been frustrating for investigators.

"This is not a perfect science, and perhaps there's other venues that need to be investigated," Rowland said Friday.

Federal investigators have fanned out across the rural southwest Connecticut community, testing the few places that 94-year-old Ottilie Lundgren visited during the last years of her life. Relatives and neighbors have said she rarely left home except to visit the library, the beauty parlor, doctors' offices and her church.

Agents gathered environmental samples by vacuum at the Immanuel Lutheran Church. At the Nu-Look Hair Salon, an agent with the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention swabbed surfaces and took samples from the ceiling air duct.

Three government officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said investigators also were seeking a soil sample from an Oxford coffee shop frequented by the victim. The tests came after residents mentioned vague recollections of an anthrax outbreak more than 50 years ago in livestock at a farm near the coffee shop.

Officials said the sample was precautionary and they had not yet found records of such an outbreak.

Lundgren died of the inhaled form of anthrax Wednesday, becoming the fifth fatality since the nation's anthrax scare began in early October. The CDC said the strain that killed her was similar to strains found in other recent cases.

Of the previous deaths, three have been tied by investigators to tainted mail sent to news organizations or members of Congress. The other mystery is the Oct. 31 death of Kathy Nguyen, a 61-year-old hospital worker in New York City.

Only 18 cases of natural inhalation anthrax have been recorded in the past 100 years, so the Connecticut case is "most likely the result of a criminal act," said Lisa Swenarski, a CDC spokeswoman.

Swenarski also said the agency should know sometime this weekend if anthrax found in a letter sent from Switzerland to Chile is from the same strain as the anthrax found in letters in Washington and New York. The letter was received last week by a pediatrician at a children's hospital in Santiago, the Chilean Health Ministry said.

"If it is the same strain that we found in these other incidents, we'll know that we are probably dealing with another attack," Swenarski said.

In Connecticut, the governor said hospitals have been asked to review the deaths of patients who had flu-like symptoms since Sept. 11 to see whether any anthrax deaths might have gone unnoticed.

"We're going to look at those who were deceased and what their diagnosis was," Yale-New Haven Hospital spokeswoman Louise Dambry said. "They asked us to look at people particularly with pneumonia symptoms."

On Friday, Dr. Eric Mast of the CDC attended a meeting with about 200 Oxford residents to address their concerns about the anthrax case in their town.

Mast said it was unlikely that cross-contaminated mail could infect large numbers of people. If it could, he said, many more anthrax cases would have been uncovered in recent weeks.

Five fatal inhalation anthrax cases have been reported since tainted letters first appeared earlier this fall.

"That is reassuring that if cross-contamination is a risk, it's a very small risk," Mast said.

2 posted on 11/24/2001 12:53:25 PM PST by t-shirt
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To: t-shirt
State powers would grow under bioterrorism bill

Sacramento City Journal

Friday, November 23, 2001

You would be quarantined and your property could be seized or destroyed by the government if you came down with smallpox as a result of a terrorist attack under a bill expected to be submitted to the state Assembly by Keith Richman, R-Sun Valley. And even if you stayed healthy, the state could force you to be vaccinated and receive treatment under Richman's proposal.

"This is going to be a very controversial bill," Richman says. "It's potentially in conflict with civil liberties."

The lawmaker, the only physician in the Assembly, says coping with a smallpox or similar public health emergency should override Constitutional liberties.

He points out that smallpox is a highly communicable disease with a 30 percent death rate. While it was eradicated from the face of the Earth as a disease 30 years ago, microbes remain in laboratories around the world.

"In a time of a public health emergency for something like a bioterrorist attack with smallpox, there are a number of potential valuable public health steps which may need to be taken. These include quarantining, commandeering property and sharing of medical records," Richman says.

He says his proposal is based on theories of Lawrence Gostin of Georgetown University's law school which are being used for a federal model backed by the Bush administration.

Spokesmen for the American Civil Liberties Union and the California Chamber of Commerce told the Sacramento Bee newspaper that they had not seen Mr. Richman's legislation but planned to examine it closely.

"It is a very difficult subject and will require an open discussion and debate to get to the right balance," Richman says. "When you're faced with a serious problem that potentially can kill 30 percent of the population we need to have these discussions before that occurs."

And he adds, "this is the type of bill we would all hope would never be used."

3 posted on 11/24/2001 12:55:49 PM PST by t-shirt
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Harvard biochemist goes missing in Memphis

'Everything was absolutely normal,' says puzzled wife

November 23, 2001

Julie Smyth

National Post

"Eventually, he would have won [a Nobel Prize]," a colleague said of Harvard biochemist Don Wiley, who has been missing for a week.

A world-renowned Harvard University professor who was considered for the Nobel Prize for his work with deadly viruses has gone missing after attending a scientific meeting in Memphis, Tenn.

Don Wiley, a biochemist at the university's Howard Hughes Medical Institute, disappeared last Friday after having dinner with members from an advisory board of St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in the city. Police found his rental car on the Hernando DeSoto Bridge, a five-minute drive from the hotel through the city's downtown, at 4 a.m., four hours after the advisory board meeting.

The car had a full tank of gas and the keys were in the ignition.

Colleagues, family members and police have no idea what happened to Mr. Wiley. They said his disappearance was uncharacteristic -- he was known to let people know his whereabouts even if he went out jogging.

Police said there were no obvious signs of foul play, although they have not ruled out the possibility. There is no evidence his credit cards have been used since he disappeared. Police have also not eliminated a possible suicide or accident and are searching the river for his body. They have been checking video surveillance cameras in the city and are trying to retrace his last known steps.

Dr. William Evans, a member of the advisory board that was meeting with Mr. Wiley, told a Tennessee newspaper: "Don was always the life of the party in terms of any kind of conversation." He added Mr. Wiley was in his usual good mood when he went missing.

The 57-year-old is one of the most highly regarded scientists in his field and has taught at Harvard since receiving his doctorate there in 1971. He is known for building the first model of the structures of influenza and human cells that allow the disease to cause infection.

Cliff Richardson, a virologist in the department of medical biophysics at the Ontario Cancer Institute said Mr. Wiley is one of the world's leading researchers in the field of biochemistry.

"Eventually he would have won [a Nobel Prize]. He has done very, very important work," he said.

Katrin Valgeirsdottir, Mr. Wiley's wife, said yesterday from her Cambridge, Mass., home she is extremely worried and has no clues as to what happened to her husband. The couple have two children, aged six and 10. Mr. Wiley also has two children, aged 26 and 34, from an earlier marriage. Ms. Valgeirsdottir last spoke to her husband a couple of days before he went missing. "He seemed fine and everything was absolutely normal. I have no idea what happened -- none whatsoever."

She was planning on flying to meet him on the day police found his abandoned car.

4 posted on 11/24/2001 12:57:43 PM PST by t-shirt
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To: t-shirt
Vladimir Pasechnik, 64, Germ Expert Who Defected (is dead)

By WOLFGANG SAXON

November 23, 2001

New York Times

r. Vladimir Pasechnik, a senior Soviet biologist whose defection in 1989 alerted Western intelligence to the scope of Moscow's clandestine efforts to adapt germs and viruses for military use, died on Wednesday in Wiltshire, England. He was 64 and lived in a nearby village.

The cause was a stroke, said Dr. Christopher J. Davis of Great Falls, Va., formerly in British intelligence.

It was Dr. Pasechnik who provided a first glimpse of Biopreparat, a network of secret laboratories, each focused on a deadly agent. His revelations were confirmed in 1992 with the defection to the United States of Dr. Ken Alibek, the No. 2 scientist for the program.

The picture that emerged was of a system of centers scattered chiefly around European Russia. There, a small army of scientists and technicians were developing potential biological weapons like anthrax, Ebola, Marburg virus, plague, Q fever and smallpox.

Dr. Pasechnik was in charge of one known as the Institute of Ultra Pure Biochemical Preparations in St. Petersburg, then Leningrad. Once in England, he told interviewers that he had no inkling that his work violated the 1972 treaty under which the United States and the Soviet Union were to halt such activities.

Once revealed, the Soviet government insisted that the research was intended to defend against acts of biological warfare by an enemy and that the program had been stopped, two claims doubted by Western intelligence.

Dr. Pasechnik defected on an official trip to the West, but little was known about his background until early 1993 when the British government permitted him to speak.

He said he had become "disgusted" with the biological weapons program, which had been denied by Presidents Mikhail S. Gorbachev and Boris N. Yeltsin, or had been hidden from them. Dr. Pasechnik said he defected in an effort to help stop it. (His own laboratory had been working on a strain of plague.)

James Adams, in his 1994 book "The New Spies," described Dr. Pasechnik as "one of the brightest stars at the Leningrad Polytechnical Institute." A native of Volgograd, formerly Stalingrad, he graduated in physics at the top of his class.

He specialized in the study of polymers for biological uses at the Institute of High Molecular Compounds in St. Petersburg. His interest, Mr. Adams wrote, was in developing new antibiotics and methods to treat diseases without known cures.

At age 37, Dr. Pasechnik was invited to start his own institute, Mr. Adams wrote, with an unlimited budget to buy equipment in the West and recruit the best staff available. The laboratory he created was part of the countrywide Biopreparat.

He later reported that the institute, with a staff of 400, did research on modifying cruise missiles to spread germs. Flying low to foil early-warning systems, the robot craft were intended to spray clouds of aerosolized pathogens over unsuspecting enemies.

Dr. Pasechnik said his team succeeded in producing an aerosolized plague microbe that could survive outside the laboratory.

Increasingly distressed, Dr. Pasechnik had begun to plan his defection in 1988, he but had never been permitted to travel abroad, Mr. Adams wrote. Meanwhile, Western intelligence agencies had been poring over bits and pieces of information for years, trying to assess the state of Soviet efforts in his field.

Dr. Pasechnik got his chance to travel in the summer of 1989. He volunteered to wrap up a pending deal with a French maker of chemical laboratory equipment. In recognition of past performance, he was allowed to travel to Toulouse to sign the contracts.

Instead, he called the British Embassy in Paris.

5 posted on 11/24/2001 1:00:08 PM PST by t-shirt
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To: dead; brat; jedediah smith; Freeper; Boot Hill
Authorities still searching for Harvard biologist

November 21, 2001

MEMPHIS (AP) — Authorities continued yesterday to search for a missing Harvard University biologist whose abandoned rental car was discovered last week on an Interstate 40 bridge spanning the Mississippi River.

Dr. Don C. Wiley, 57, was in Memphis attending the annual meeting of the Scientific Advisory Board of the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. The board met last Wednesday and Thursday.

Wiley's car was discovered on the Hernando DeSoto Bridge about 4 a.m. Friday. Police said the key was still in the ignition and the car had a full tank of gas.

''We just don't know where he is right at the moment,'' Memphis Police Inspector Matt McCann said Monday. ''There is no indication of foul play that we can determine at this point.''

McCain said Wiley, a Harvard biochemistry and biophysics professor, is ''known throughout the world in his field.''

''For him to suddenly disappear like this is of great concern to us. We're putting in a lot of man-hours trying to locate him,'' McCann said.

In 1999, Wiley and Dr. Jack Strominger of Harvard won the Japan Prize for their discoveries of how the immune system protects humans from infections.

6 posted on 11/24/2001 1:03:12 PM PST by t-shirt
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To: t-shirt
Widow who died of anthrax laid to rest

November 24, 2001 Posted: 1:22 PM EST (1822 GMT)

OXFORD, Connecticut (CNN) -- Family and friends of an elderly Connecticut widow who died of anthrax gathered Saturday to say their final farewells, as investigators continued to try to solve the baffling mystery of how she contracted the deadly illness.

The funeral for Ottilie Lundgren, 94, who died Wednesday, was held Saturday at Immanuel Lutheran Church in Oxford. At the family's request, the service was closed to the media.

Lundgren was the latest in a string of 18 confirmed anthrax infections, resulting in five deaths. Tests showed that the anthrax that killed her was indistinguishable from the anthrax in the other cases, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia.

But unlike most of the other victims -- in Florida, New Jersey, New York City and Washington, D.C. -- she had no apparent connection to the U.S. Postal Service, government offices or media outlets that have received or processed anthrax-laden letters.

Only one of the other victims -- Kathy Nguyen, a New York City hospital worker who died October 31 -- had a similar lack of connection to the letters. Lundgren's infection is even more mysterious because she lived alone in rural Connecticut, had a limited schedule and didn't travel much.

Investigators are painstakingly reconstructing the last weeks of Lundgren's life, looking for the source of the anthrax contamination. They have taken environmental samples at a hair salon frequented by Lundgren, as well as Oxford's town hall, library and a local diner.

Among the scenarios being investigated is that she might have been infected through contaminated mail. But Lundgren's home and about two-weeks-worth of mail found inside have so far tested negative for anthrax, as did tests on a post office and postal distribution center that handled her mail.

About 400 people in the Oxford area -- including 350 postal workers and people who might have had contact with Lundgren -- have also tested negative for exposure to anthrax, Gov. John Rowland said Friday.

FBI agents working on the Lundgren case are also comparing notes with agents investigating Nguyen's death, trying to see if there might be any links between the two women. So far, however, no links have been found, said Lisa Bull, an FBI agent in New Haven.

On Friday night, about 200 people in the Oxford area attended a town meeting at a junior high school in Seymour. Officials from the CDC and state and local health agencies answered questions from worried residents, discussing the potentially deadly bacteria and symptoms of infection.

In another anthrax-related development, the CDC confirmed Friday that a white powdery substance found in a letter sent to a children's hospital in Santiago, Chile, was anthrax. The letter had a Florida return address but was actually postmarked in Zurich, Switzerland, according to the Chilean Health Ministry.

The Santiago letter is the first outside the United States to be confirmed as containing anthrax. Suspicious letters found in Bahamas, Kenya, Pakistan and Venezuela all tested negative for anthrax.

Thirteen people who were in the vicinity when the letter was opened have placed on a course of antibiotics, the Chilean health ministry said.

------------------------------------------------------------

Ottilie Lundgren's picture can be seen here:

http://www.cnn.com/2001/HEALTH/conditions/11/24/connecticut.anthrax/index.html

7 posted on 11/24/2001 1:06:00 PM PST by t-shirt
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To: t-shirt
Explain to me this folks.... with all these scientists turning up DEAD or MISSING... WHY AM I GROWING INCREASINGLY SUSPICIOUS THAT IRAQ IS BEHIND THIS????
8 posted on 11/24/2001 1:06:04 PM PST by Roger_W_Isom
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To: t-shirt
Connecticut, D.C. anthrax same

By Guy Taylor

THE WASHINGTON TIMES

November 24, 2001

The same type of anthrax spores mailed last month to senators on Capitol Hill killed an elderly Connecticut widow this week, but early tests on her home showed no traces of the bacteria, officials said.

Tests of the mail, mailbox and garbage at 94-year-old Ottilie Lundgren's home in rural Oxford, Conn., were negative for anthrax exposure, Connecticut Gov. John G. Rowland said yesterday.

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) confirmed that the spores found in the woman's bloodstream are "indistinguishable" from those found in anthrax-laced letters mailed to U.S. Sens. Tom Daschle and Patrick J. Leahy.

The anthrax spores found in those letters were manufactured and not naturally occurring, federal law enforcement authorities said. The finding rules out theories that Mrs. Lundgren contracted a naturally occurring form of the disease, but it has not helped federal investigators trace the bacteria's origin.

"We're continuing to reconstruct a picture of her life over the last 30 days," said FBI spokeswoman Lisa Bull.

Meanwhile, the CDC confirmed that a letter sent from Switzerland to Chile was tainted with anthrax spores.

The letter was sent to Dr. Antonio Banfi, a pediatrician at a children's hospital in Santiago. Dr. Banfi, who opened the envelope, and 12 others nearby have tested negative for anthrax exposure but were being treated as a precaution, according to the Chilean Health Ministry.

Chilean officials said Dr. Banfi became suspicious because the letter was postmarked in Zurich but bore a Florida return address.

There have been several other reports of anthrax spores being found in mail worldwide, but most have turned out to be false.

In Connecticut, Mr. Rowland said tests have not detected any anthrax spores at the post office in Seymour, which handles mail for Oxford, or the processing center in Wallingford, which sorts mail for all of southern Connecticut. About 400 post offices in the region also have tested negative for anthrax exposure.

Mrs. Lundgren, a retired legal secretary, on Wednesday became the fifth U.S. fatality of inhalation anthrax, the most deadly form of the disease. Friends and relatives said she seldom left home, except to visit the library, a beauty parlor, doctor's office and her church.

Authorities said her death resembles that of Kathy T. Nguyen, a New York hospital worker who died last month. Three other persons who have died from the disease since Oct. 4 had direct contact with tainted mail at their workplaces.

In the District, Bill Burrus, president of the 360,000 member American Postal Workers Union, recommended his members refuse to work in buildings where any trace of anthrax spores remains.

The U.S. Postal Service has tested 279 facilities nationwide for anthrax exposure, 21 of which tested positive for "at least trace amounts of anthrax," said Postal Service spokesman Jerry Kreienkamp. All but two — the District's central mail-processing facility on Brentwood Road NE and a post office in Trenton, N.J. — have been cleaned and reopened, Mr. Kreienkamp said.

No postal employees have been allowed to work at the Brentwood Road and Trenton facilities, he said.

But Mr. Burrus said he became alarmed when anthrax-contaminated sorting equipment at a New York facility was cordoned off and cleaned while work continued in the rest of the building. Having postal workers wear masks and gloves while hazardous materials experts are doing cleanup nearby "is not sound medical procedure," he said.

Mr. Kreienkamp said that the cleaning took place "on a different" floor from the postal workers, and that the Postal Service "followed the recommendations of health experts." At least 20,000 postal workers have been given antibiotics.

Mr. Burrus said even after a facility has been cleaned, "testing is imperfect at best. If there is something on a wall or the lights and if it becomes airborne, there's a risk of exposure."

A postal manager at the Bladensburg Road post office in the District said the postal union would be going too far if it asks employees to not show up for work.

"The union has a right to do what they're doing; they're just trying to stick up for their guys," said Brian McCutchan, who manages the post office at 3178 Bladensburg Road NE. "But if a facility tested positive for anthrax and it's been cleaned out and tested again and there's no more anthrax there, I say go back to work. It's not like the Postal Service is trying to hide anything."

Mr. Kreienkamp said the delivery of an estimated 20 billion pieces of holiday mail will not be delayed by union resistance. "We know [the workers] are going to deliver this holiday season as they always have," he said.

•This article is based in part on wire service reports.

9 posted on 11/24/2001 1:08:36 PM PST by t-shirt
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To: Roger_W_Isom
FBI is watching case of missing biologist

By Michael Rosenwald, Boston Globe Staff, 11/24/2001

ederal agents are closely monitoring the disappearance case of Harvard biology professor Don C. Wiley because of his research interests in a number of potentially deadly viruses, including Ebola, the FBI said yesterday in Memphis.

Wiley's whereabouts remained a mystery yesterday, a week after his car was found on a bridge over the Mississippi River. His family continued to insist that the noted biologist, whose papers explored the workings of some of the deadliest viruses in the world, would not have killed himself.

William Woerner, the acting assistant special agent in charge of the Memphis FBI office, said his agents became interested in the case after learning of Wiley's profession, then made their interest known to Memphis detectives.

''His line of work and field of expertise [are] what prompted our call to them,'' Woerner said, adding that his office was concerned ''given our state of affairs post-Sept. 11.''

Federal authorities are paying close attention to potential bioterrorist threats. The Ebola virus - about which Wiley was a national expert, along with HIV and influenza - is a hemorrhagic fever that causes the body's fluids to ooze out of tissues and orifices.

Ebola is highly contagious and lethal, killing between 50 and 90 percent of people infected in known outbreaks. There is no vaccine.

Wiley's wife, Katrin Valgeirsdottir, said that while she is baffled by her husband's disappearance, she did not think it was related to his work or papers, which can be found on his lab's Web site.

''That just doesn't seem plausible,'' Valgeirsdottir said. ''I mean, there are a lot of kooks out there, and I don't know for a fact that this wasn't the reason, but you'd have to have someone who read his Web site and decided they found something interesting.''

Woerner said he wasn't sure whether top FBI officials in Washington had been notified about Wiley, who has been missing since Nov. 16. ''It's very likely that Washington has been notified, but I can't confirm that,'' he said.

Memphis police have control over the investigation, Woerner said.

Lieutenant Walter Norris of the city's homicide squad refused to confirm whether detectives were considering Wiley's profession as a reason for his disappearance. ''We're checking anything that can be thought of,'' he said. ''Some things the FBI can help us on, so there is involvement there also.''

Norris said there were no developments in the case yesterday. Authorities continued to patrol, in boats and helicopters, the area of the Mississippi River where Wiley's rented car was found nearby early in the morning of Nov. 16.

Based on her daily communications with Memphis police about her husband's case, Valgeirsdottir said, she thinks investigators are focusing on the river. ''They've mentioned that maybe it was an accident, that he fell in, or that he jumped, but clearly they are focusing on the river as being the site to whatever happened,'' she said.

She recently learned that there was some small damage to the car, but said she did not know what it was. Memphis police refused to confirm or deny there was any damage.

Norris said missing-person cases are not unusual in and around the city. ''People come up missing all the time,'' he said, ''and a lot of times they turn up.''

If Wiley somehow wound up in the river and drowned, it could be weeks or even months before a body is found, Norris said.

Wiley has not been seen since about midnight on Nov. 16, when he attended a banquet with colleagues on the scientific advisory board of St. Jude Children's Research Hospital at The Peabody hotel in Memphis.

Police discovered his rented Mitsubishi Galant at 4 a.m. on the Hernando DeSoto Bridge, which is a five-minute drive from the hotel. The car was pointed toward Arkansas, and police have said the car was probably there no longer than 15 minutes before an officer saw it, because a stopped vehicle would have backed up traffic on the two-lane bridge. There was no sign of a struggle.

''This whole thing,'' Valgeirsdottir said, ''just doesn't add up.''

Michael Rosenwald can be reached at mrosenwald@globe.com.

10 posted on 11/24/2001 1:11:54 PM PST by t-shirt
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To: DoughtyOne; freedomson; AMERIKA; MAD-AS-HELL; Mercuria
'Hot Zone' author paints grim picture

Richard Preston outlines bioterrorism threat in ISU speech

November 18, 2001 By TAMMY JOHNSON

of the Journal Star

NORMAL - Illinois State University President Victor Boschini had high praise for an author who visited the school last week.

"He's brilliant, he's funny and he scared the hell out of me," Boschini said.

Investigative journalist Richard Preston, author of "The Hot Zone" and "The Cobra Event: A Case Study in Biological Terrorism," both books on bioterrorism, warned students, faculty and administrators about the real threat of bioterrorism in the United States.

Preston's words may have failed to instill a real sense of fear in Americans a few months ago, but the large crowd remained dead silent Tuesday after he wrapped up the last of several true stories on deadly viruses.

While Preston focused largely on the global threat of smallpox, he also addressed questions about the latest anthrax scare.

He criticized the government for wasting time after the first anthrax outbreak. Lives were lost unnecessarily, he said, because officials assumed natural causes were behind the anthrax.

He also was "outraged" when "The Cobra Event," a 1997 novel on biological weapons and terrorism, failed to generate enough attention from government officials.

Instead, the book was paid lip service, he said. "At some important level, the government wasn't getting it."

"The Cobra Event" centers on a young doctor who works with a secret FBI team to stop bioterrorism in New York City.

Preston said his novel and the current anthrax situation have several parallels.

For example, the attacker in Preston's novel is a serial terrorist. Similarly, the FBI believes one person - likely someone with a scientific background - is responsible for mailing the anthrax.

Although the novel is fictional, it is backed by three years of research. Preston said he decided to turn the project into a novel when some of his most important FBI sources refused to talk unless they remained anonymous.

Preston's earlier book, "The Hot Zone," was a best-selling nonfiction book that eventually led to production of the movie "Outbreak."

"The Hot Zone" documents a natural outbreak of the Ebola virus near Washington, D.C., in 1989.

Preston said he wondered why the government knew so much about the deadly virus. He later learned the former Soviet Union had Ebola stored in missiles aimed at the United States.

But smallpox is a far greater threat, he said, and the former Soviet Union was thought to have large amounts of it as well.

North Korea, Iran and Iraq also have experimented with smallpox as a weapon, and Syria, Israel, India, China and Pakistan also may have researched the possibility of using it.

The highly contagious virus has a one-in-three fatality rate, Preston said, adding that one person with smallpox would constitute a global emergency.

To make matters worse, little of the vaccine is available, although there is a concerted effort to make more, he said.

Smallpox is expensive and difficult to use as a biological weapon, Preston said. Anthrax, on the other hand, is a good biological weapon because it's cheaper and requires less skill to make.

In addition, with the help of silica - a substance found in potato chips to keep them from getting soggy and sticking together - anthrax in its powder form dissipates into the air.

Despite his warnings, Preston left audience members with a few positive words and some suggestions for the future.

The United States has the most powerful biotechnology in the world and is working on technology that would instantly detect viruses such as smallpox and anthrax, he said.

More funding for such research and increased respect for public health officials would further protect Americans from bioterrorism.

He said the public health community needs additional money to better prepare itself for the emergence of diseases.

ISU freshmen Nicole Wenzel and Lauren Zajac said Preston's warnings put a bit of a scare into them, but not because of the recent anthrax cases. Instead, they are frightened by the idea that other countries may have stockpiles of the bacteria.

"I'm more scared of smallpox than anthrax because there isn't a cure and there are limited vaccines," Wenzel said.

David Williams, ISU associate vice president of Information and Technology, said Preston believes it's his mission to warn Americans about smallpox.

"And he's good about putting it into lay terms so it gets people's attention," he said.

11 posted on 11/24/2001 1:14:12 PM PST by t-shirt
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To: blam; RLK
Texas plant will burn anthrax-tainted material CBS Channel 11 -- Texas

http://www.cbs11tv.com/StoryDisplay.asp?StoryID=7056

BEAUMONT - An industrial waste incinerator in Port Arthur will destroy anthrax-impregnated material from terrorist mailings, the site manager said Tuesday.

Art Mathes, general manager of Onyx Environmental Services, said for a report in Wednesday's Beaumont En-terprise that the material is expected to arrive within two weeks. Mathes said the materials will be decontaminated before being shipped to Texas.

"Our facility has been contacted by several professional remediation companies acting on behalf of the U.S. government or private enterprise," Mathes said in a statement.

He declined to name the government agencies or companies.

Mathes said Onyx will accept and destroy the materials in the national interest. He did not say how much waste the facility will handle.

In a letter to U.S. Rep. Nick Lampson, D-Beaumont, Mathes assured him that all applicable federal regulations will be followed.

Lampson said in a statement Tuesday that he wants President Bush to ensure the safety of the material before it is shipped to Jefferson County.

"We have seen missteps in the handling of anthrax-contaminated materials," Lampson said.

"I don't want to see another occur because we did not take the time to see this is done properly. We don't know what works and what doesn't. How can they assure us this material is decontaminated?"

Mathes said the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention require all generators of hazardous wastes and debris to decontaminate the material before transportation.

"In accordance with our hazardous waste-handling policies, prior to shipment to our facility, these wastes will be treated with disinfecting solutions and procedures approved by the Centers for Disease Control that render them noninfectious," Mathes said.

"They pose no risk to our employees, the surrounding community or the environment."

He also said the U.S. Transportation Department requires that a licensed hazardous-waste carrier bring the material to Onyx's industrial rotary kiln on Texas 73 west of Port Arthur and south of Port Acres.

12 posted on 11/24/2001 1:16:32 PM PST by t-shirt
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To: t-shirt
11/21/2001 - Updated 09:05 AM ET

U.S. ready to order smallpox vaccine

By Anita Manning, USA TODAY

By Rick Bowmer, AP

Tommy Thompson says a contract could be announced today.

The Bush administration is poised to select one or more drug companies to manufacture millions of doses of smallpox vaccine to protect Americans from a potential reintroduction of the dreaded disease. Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson said in an interview Tuesday that a contract could be announced as early as today to produce vaccine that adds to the current supply of 15.4 million doses. Enough doses would be produced "to have every man, woman and child, 288 million, with their name on it."

Routine smallpox vaccinations in the USA ceased in 1972, and the last case in the world occurred in 1978. But since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and the deadly anthrax mailings, fears that the virus could be used as a weapon have prompted officials to boost vaccine stockpiles.

Smallpox is fatal in about 30% of cases. Lesions leave pitted scars on survivors.

Thompson said he can't disclose which vaccine manufacturers will be awarded contracts. Three major pharmaceutical companies, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck and Baxter International with partner Acambis, have been in talks with the government. A fourth, American Home Products, withdrew from consideration last week.

Thompson defended the administration's recent decision to preserve the USA's cache of smallpox virus, which is at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. The only other official repository for the virus is at a Russian facility in Siberia, but it is believed that clandestine stocks exist elsewhere.

Thompson said there is evidence that North Korea, Iraq and other countries may have smallpox stores that they have genetically modified to use as weapons.

"Some of the experts in the medical community believe we need to keep the virus so we can use (it) to develop a changed vaccine" against such new strains, he said.

In the wide-ranging interview, Thompson also outlined how the government would respond to a single case of smallpox. First, he said, the hospital would be quarantined, and a team of CDC epidemiologists would be sent in. Vaccine would be rushed to the region, and hospital workers and others would be vaccinated, forming a protective circle around the patient.

"That's how it was eradicated before," he said.

The vaccine can prevent the disease if given within 4 days of exposure, he said, "and we feel we could get that vaccine out there within hours if it's needed, once we have it in our supply."

In addition to contracting for new doses of vaccine, Thompson said preliminary tests suggest that it is possible to "distill the current supply by 5-to-1, giving us 77 million doses out of our current supply."

Those studies, under the direction of the National Institutes of Health, will be completed by early February.

Contributing: Steve Sternberg and Julie Appleby

13 posted on 11/24/2001 1:18:04 PM PST by t-shirt
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To: t-shirt
Post office retrieves ring, just in time

Saturday, November 24, 2001

The Associated Press

HAMILTON -- It was down to the wire Friday for husband-to-be Thomas Cramer.

His wedding was just one day away, and the engagement ring for his fiancee was somewhere among the 10 truckloads of mail quarantined at the Hamilton Township postal facility after it was contaminated with anthrax.

On Friday, the post office delivered.

At a ceremony outside the Hamilton facility, Trenton Postmaster Joseph Sautello presented Cramer with the ring -- a gold band with a heart-shaped diamond and two smaller gems. Certified anthrax-free.

Cramer presented it to his fiancee.

"I love it," said Amanda Boone, 23.

"At least it's not going to look like I didn't get her a ring," Cramer said after kissing her.

Cramer, 30, bought the ring at a Hamilton jewelry store, then mailed it to his father in Ohio so Boone wouldn't find it. When Cramer was ready to give her the ring, his father mailed it back -- just in time for anthrax scares to shutter post offices around New Jersey.

"I wasn't sure how quickly they could decontaminate it and get it to me," he said.

Cramer said he told his betrothed about the ring, and even showed her the paperwork to prove he bought it. He approached postal inspectors in late October and asked for help in retrieving the ring.

Once the ring was located, it was sanitized and vacuumed to ensure there was no anthrax on it. Postal Inspector Tony Esposito said he had no worries about delivering it.

The other 500,000 pieces of mail at the Hamilton facility were irradiated last week to kill any possible anthrax bacteria and will be delivered next week. The ring was the first piece of mail delivered from the facility since it closed Oct. 18.

Cramer said the wedding would have still gone on without the ring -- complete with flowers, cake, and wedding bands.

Cramer said he was surprised by the amount of attention the incident has gotten, but that he's proud of his efforts: "I'm just glad I didn't cheap out and get a tiny chip."

14 posted on 11/24/2001 1:19:36 PM PST by t-shirt
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To: t-shirt
State attorney general: Avoid online cure-alls

Hardy Myers says self-treatments are hoaxes.

PETER WONG

Statesman Journal

November 24

Attorney General Hardy Myers is warning against Internet promoters of products that purport to offer protection against anthrax and other biological and chemical threats.

He said the products are hoaxes.

“Federal experts are aware of no scientific basis for any of the self-treatment alternatives being marketed on the Internet,” Myers said. “The best advice for Oregon consumers is to immediately consult a physician if they believe they may have been exposed to a biological agent.”

No cases of anthrax have turned up in Oregon or the West Coast. Five people have died and others sickened, all on the East Coast.

Myers and attorneys general in 29 other states took part in a coordinated search of Web sites with the Federal Trade Commission, U.S. Food and Drug Administration and California Department of Health Services.

The search turned up more than 200 sites marketing products and therapies purporting to prevent, treat or cure anthrax, smallpox and other health hazards. The FTC has told 40 site operators to pull their information, which include marketing of biohazard test kits, mail sterilizers, gas masks and protective suits and homeopathic remedies.

In October, Myers’ consumer protection office took part with others in a narrower search focusing on Internet sales of the antibiotic ciprofloxacin, which is a recognized medical treatment for anthrax and skin rashes, and Cipro-related business opportunities.

Myers said people should be wary of Internet promotions of anthrax test kits, potions or pills, curative diets or magnetic, light or electrical devices. “The only known effective treatments for biological agents like anthrax or smallpox are approved prescription drugs and vaccines,” he said.

Peter Wong can be reached at (503) 399-6745

15 posted on 11/24/2001 1:20:31 PM PST by t-shirt
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To: t-shirt
Security task force studies quarantines, emergency aid Issues raided by terrorist attacks and anthrax letters will go before the Ohio legislature.

Saturday, November 24, 2001 David Lore

Dispatch Science Reporter

Ohio health officials are considering how to establish and enforce a mass quarantine in the event of a major biological attack or epidemic.

The problem is just one of several being studied by Gov. Bob Taft's Security Task Force for possible resolution in the state legislature next year, said Lt. Gov. Maureen O'Connor, chairwoman of the group.

Another priority is identifying and establishing round-the-clock communications links with critical industries that might be terrorist targets, she said.

State officials also want a statewide mutual-aid compact for the dispatch of fire and law-enforcement units from across Ohio in the event of an emergency that can't be handled by local authorities.

Ohio law now states that the state Health Department has "supreme authority in matters of quarantine.''

There's uncertainty, though, because the state hasn't had any experience with mass quarantines for more than half a century, said Jodi Govern, the Health Department's chief legal counsel.

"The problem everybody recognizes is 'How do you actually put a large quarantine into place?' '' she said. "How do you quarantine the city of Columbus or several rural counties? It would be very difficult.''

Antibiotics reduced the threat of epidemics in this country, but now health officials have to worry about mass casualties from a terrorist attack using infectious diseases such as smallpox or the plague.

Even a widespread flu epidemic can't be ruled out, she said. The worldwide influenza pandemic in 1918-1919, for example, killed about 19,000 Ohioans, including 1,177 soldiers at Camp Sherman in Chillicothe.

Govern and Dale Shipley, director of the Ohio Emergency Management Agency, said state powers might have to be clarified as a mass quarantine likely would extend across political boundaries and involve restrictions on movement into or out of the infected area, or even the entire state.

Ohio law, Govern said, doesn't provide any guidance on how to enforce such a quarantine and what penalties could be imposed for breaking it or refusing vaccination.

Shipley said, "Under law, there's no doubt that Agriculture Director Fred Dailey can quarantine a herd, but Dr. Nick Baird at the Health Department doesn't exactly have the same authority.''

Medical issues aren't the only ones that will be put before the legislature next year because of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and the anthrax-laced letters.

"We need to look at all our critical systems and decide what to change,'' Shipley said.

At the governor's request, the Emergency Management Agency is compiling data on every conceivable terrorist target in the state, including utility plants, factories and other businesses critical to public well-being, he said.

"Our definition of critical assets is much different now, post-Sept.11,'' O'Connor said. "We're now looking at the enemy's ability to disrupt and destroy our homeland.''

The next step, which also could require legislation, is the establishment of a 24-hour emergency communications network linking plant operators to both state and local authorities.

In the past, disaster information has been passed up the line from local communities to state and federal agencies.

"Sept. 11 showed there was little ability to pass information down the chain,'' Shipley said. "The system is not set up now for me to inform people (at the local level) of a terrorist threat.''

State officials also cite the need for a statewide mutual-aid compact to direct the muster of firefighters, emergency medical care and law-enforcement agencies within Ohio in the event of a major disaster.

Today, there are only mutual-aid agreements between neighboring communities. The Ohio Fire Chiefs Association, however, is already working on a statewide plan for calling up firefighting units as needed.

Another immediate need is to make sure all first-responders have adequate equipment, whether they're firefighters, police officers, hazardous-materials crews or ambulance squads.

Ohio EMA expects to be able to distribute $5.4 million in federal anti-terrorism funds to local governments by early next year. The money is earmarked for protective clothing, decontamination units and communications gear for emergency forces.

The Ohio allocation comes from a $200 million U.S. Department of Justice program approved long before Sept. 11. Now Congress is debating multibillion dollar anti-terrorism packages for 2002.

"We're looking forward to the 2002 appropriations,'' Shipley said. "There's a lot of work that needs to be done.''

16 posted on 11/24/2001 1:22:25 PM PST by t-shirt
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To: t-shirt
Great articles. Considering Slick's fascination with biologicals used as weapons, there's no excuse for this "unpreparedness." But then again, his interest in biologicals wasn't about countering the damage they could do, but in finding just how potentially destructive they could actually be.

Project "Clear Vision"?

17 posted on 11/24/2001 1:27:16 PM PST by keri
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To: t-shirt
Connecticut woman's anthrax death still a mystery, authorities say

I can think of one way:
The terrorist rings her door bell and asks the old woman to sniff a new perfume ...

Boys and girls at the FBI - now you think up a way.

18 posted on 11/24/2001 1:38:26 PM PST by bimbo
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To: t-shirt
While you're posting some of the dots, this seems like a good time to re-examine Richard Preston's chilling classic, THE DEMON IN THE FREEZER.
19 posted on 11/24/2001 1:40:39 PM PST by Gritty
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To: t-shirt
Thanks for keeping focused on THIS STORY!..........Bio-Bump!
20 posted on 11/24/2001 1:52:27 PM PST by maestro
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