Posted on 10/23/2001 3:30:05 AM PDT by gold
JACKSON, Miss. - Even as the FBI and state officials searched Monday for a crop duster pilot who sprayed two boats on the Mississippi River last week, experts downplayed suggestions of bioterrorism. The incident could be one of dozens of accidental sprayings reported every year in the cotton-rich Delta, they said.
State epidemiologist Dr. Mary Courier said preliminary tests found no evidence of anthrax, and a six-man crew on the barge tow sprayed by a crop duster on Friday had been told to stop taking antibiotics. The tow, which had been quarantined near Rosedale, was allowed to continue.
Officials hope to know today whether the substance that was sprayed onto at the tow and possibly a pleasure craft was the saltwater solution used to defoliate cotton crops.
"This is not an unusual event in Mississippi. It happens every year,'' said Chris Sparkman, deputy commissioner with the Mississippi Department of Agriculture. "There is cotton in that immediate area, between the river and the levee. . . . It could very well be a case of drift."
Sparkman said the state logged more than 150 complaints of misapplication in 1999 and about two dozen last year.
Friday's spraying attracted the attention of authorities, at least in part, because of the fear by some on the barge tow that the pilot's path seemed deliberate.
Three investigators from the state's Agriculture Department were reviewing flight logs of more than 40 crop dusting companies and talking to area planters to find out who was in the air that day.
Contact Jackson, Miss., Bureau reporter Reed Branson at (601) 352-8631.
October 23, 2001
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