Ricin Find Closes Senate Offices
NewsMax Wires
Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2004
WASHINGTON -- Three Senate office buildings were closed
Tuesday after a suspicious white powder, apparently delivered
through the mail system, was found in the Senate majority leader's
office. Officials said several preliminary tests - but not all of
them - were positive for ricin, a deadly poison.
More definitive test results were expected later Tuesday.
"This is a criminal action," Sen. Bill Frist, R-Tenn., whose
staff discovered the white powder in their Dirksen Senate Office
Building mailroom, said late Monday.
On Tuesday morning, he said, "Everything's under control. I
feel real good."
Dirksen and the other two main Senate office buildings were
closed Tuesday as authorities were to remove and test all mail that
has been delivered there. Senate officials were hoping that process
would take only a day, said one congressional official speaking on
condition of anonymity.
The closures were forcing the cancellation of committee meetings
scheduled for those buildings. But the Capitol was to remain open
with the Senate convening Tuesday morning as scheduled.
The Senate continued its session, looking to debate a $317
billion highway bill.
"We're going to go forward with our schedule today," said Sen.
Jon Kyl, R-Ariz. "They're in the process of checking the buildings
that have been shut shut down."
"The bottom line is that, given what happend before with the
anthrax, we just want to take all precautions at this stage just to
make sure there's nothing more," Kyl said, emerging from Frist's
office Tuesday morning.
On the House side of the Capitol, mail deliveries have been
suspended and Capitol Police have advised lawmakers not to open any
mail. However, hearings and debate on the House floor were to
proceed as usual.
There were no reports of anyone becoming sick from exposure as
of Tuesday morning, the congressional official said.
At least 16 people on the floor were decontaminated, and others
who might have been in the area were urged to contact Senate
officials, Capitol Police Chief Terrance Gainer told reporters at a
late Monday night news conference. The decontamination procedure
was not explained, but witnesses saw some people emerging into the
cold from a van outside the Dirksen building clad only in T-shirts
and pants. One wore a white jumpsuit.
However, no one was expected to get sick, said Frist, who
normally uses his Capitol majority leader's office instead of the
Dirksen office. If symptoms of ricin poisoning have not surfaced in
about eight hours, contamination is unlikely, said Frist, a surgeon
before his election to the Senate.
A majority of tests conducted on the powder indicated ricin,
Gainer said, even though some were negative.
Charles Dasey, a spokesman at Fort Detrick, Md., said scientists
there were doing a "confirmatory" test on the substance. The test
is "higher reliability" but will take longer, he said.
In Connecticut, meanwhile, a postal worker found an unidentified
powder leaking out of an envelope addressed to the Republican
National Committee, and inspectors were trying to identify it. The
powder was found late Monday at the Wallingford postal sorting
center, the same facility where anthrax spores were found in 2001.
A clue to ricin poisoning is a suddenly developed fever, cough
and excess fluid in the lungs, a fact sheet from the federal
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says. These symptoms
could be followed by severe breathing problems and possibly death,
the CDC said. There is no known antidote.
Twice as deadly as cobra venom, ricin, which is derived from the
castor bean plant, is relatively easily made and can be inhaled,
ingested or injected.
Gainer said they were still investigating how the powder got
into the mailroom.
The Homeland Security Department was monitoring the situation,
spokesman Brian Roehrkasse said. An FBI official said the agency
was awaiting a final test from a laboratory at Fort Detrick, Md.,
before deciding whether to get more fully involved in the case.
Democrat Tom Daschle of South Dakota was majority leader in 2001
when deadly anthrax was found in letters sent to his office and the
office of Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., in the Hart Senate Office
Building. No one was ever arrested in those incidents.
Hundreds of Capitol workers, reporters and tourists who were in
the Hart building lined up for tests and doses of Cipro and other
antibiotics after the anthrax attack. Areas of that building were
closed for months for decontamination.
Bob Stevenson, a spokesman for Frist, said the closure of the
Senate office buildings Tuesday was "to facilitate collection and
removal of unopened mail."
Stevenson said Capitol tours were being suspended, Senate
restaurants closed and Senate pages given the day off. But he said
essential Capitol employees were expected to report to work as
usual.
The House was scheduled to convene at 12:30 p.m.
Frist gave no indication that extra security had been ordered
for the Capitol complex, although security in the area has been
high since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
Mail to congressional offices has been irradiated since the 2001
anthrax attack, but Frist said radiation is unlikely to have an
effect on ricin.
In October, a package containing ricin was found at a postal
facility serving Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport in
South Carolina.
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