Sections
Log in
Top News
U.S. News World News Featured Voices
Odd News
Entertainment
Movies Music TV
Sports
Soccer NFL NBA MLB NHL Golf Horse Racing Tennis Col. Football Col. Basketball
Photos
News Entertainment Sports Features Archives
More...
Defense Featured Science Health Archive Almanac
About Feedback
About Feedback
Search
Trending
Supreme Court
Border theft
Statue of Liberty
Michael Cohen
Robert Kraft
Jair Bolsonaro
Raytheon
Florida pot
Older workers
Netherlands attack
U.S. News
July 19, 2011 / 10:37 AM

U.S. questions 2001 anthrax accusation

In this file photo, an FBI employee opens the anthrax tainted letter at an FBI lab, sent to Sen. Patrick Leahy, on Dec. 6, 2001. rlw/FBI/FILE UPI | License Photo
WAX2001120698 - 06 DECEMBER 2001 - WASHINGTON, D.C., USA: An FBI employee opens the anthrax tainted letter, sent to Sen. Patrick Leahy, December 6, 2001, at an FBI lab. rlw/FBI UPI | License Photo
WAP2001103002 - 30 OCTOBER 2001 - WASHINGTON, DC, USA: A member of the Marine Corps Chemical Biological Incident Response Force stands in front of the US Capitol on October 30, 2001. The press conference was held by Representative Steny Hoyer (D-MD) to demonstrate the forces involvement in the anthrax clean up of the Capitol. mk/Michael Kleinfeld UPI | License Photo

WASHINGTON, July 19 (UPI) -- The U.S. Justice Department is questioning the case against an Army scientist accused of sending anthrax in the mail in 2001, court papers show.

After Bruce Ivins committed suicide in 2008, the FBI said he was the killer who sent the poisoned letters to senators and media figures. Officials said he had the means, motive and opportunity to make the deadly powder at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases at Fort Detrick, Md.

But now, in papers filed in federal court in West Palm Beach, Fla., Friday, Justice Department lawyers say the sealed area in Ivins' lab lacked the equipment to turn liquid anthrax into the deadly refined powder. The documents were entered in a wrongful-death suit by Maureen Stevens, widow of Robert Stevens, a photo editor at The Sun tabloid, and uncovered by reporters for McClatchy Newspapers, ProPublica and PBS' "Frontline."

The government said it still believes Ivins was "more likely than not" the killer but did not explain where or how he could have made the powder.

Searches of Ivins' car and home in 2007 found no anthrax spores, and the FBI never gave direct evidence that he mailed the letters.

  • Topics
  • Bruce Ivins
Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram for more UPI news and photos.

Trending Stories

Florida lifts ban to let patients smoke medical marijuana
Concertina wire stolen from U.S.-Mexico border at Tijuana
Central Mexico under yellow alert after Popocapetl erupts
Calif. universities take action with students linked to scandal
Supreme Court: U.S. can arrest deportation-eligible immigrants years after crime

Photo Gallery

 
Parades mark St. Patrick's Day weekend in United States

Latest News

Human Rights Watch: Japan's transgender sterilization law is 'regressive'
Kentucky hemp sales triple in 2018
Last Soviet-era leader resigns
On This Day: LBJ orders National Guard to protect Selma march
UPI Almanac for Wednesday, March 20, 2019
 
Back to Article
/
Back to top
About UPI Contact Feedback Advertisements Submit News Tips
Copyright © 2019 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Terms of UsePrivacy Policy