The Sorority Made Him Do It
Was he trying to get the attention of someone who looked like Jodie Foster?
The top suspect in the 2001 anthrax attacks was obsessed with a sorority that sat less than 100 yards away from a New Jersey mailbox where the toxin-laced letters were sent, authorities said Monday. Multiple U.S. officials told The Associated Press that former Army scientist Bruce Ivins was long obsessed with the sorority Kappa Kappa Gamma, going back as far as his own college days at the University of Cincinnati.
The officials all spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the case publicly.
The bizarre link to the sorority may indirectly explain one of the biggest mysteries in the case: why the anthrax was mailed from Princeton, N.J., 195 miles from the Army biological weapons lab the anthrax is believed to have been smuggled out of.
This is some major bullshit right here. Why would Ivins' obsession with some random sorority have anything to do with mailing letters made to look like they came from Muslim extremists to Patrick Leahy, Tom Daschle, Tom Brokaw and Peter Jennings? This "he was a woman-hater" narrative has nothing to do with the crime committed. And as usual for this case, contradictory information shows up later in the article - nobody can place Ivins at the mailbox or even in New Jersey at the time of the mailings.
Meanwhile the feds are dying to close this probe and wash their hands of it. And yet all the leaks coming out are from unnamed government scientist sources (just like the unnamed sources that led ABC News astray with the bentonite story in late 2001).
This case stinks on ice, and it always has. Somebody tried to frame Dr. Ayaad Assaad before anybody was even killed:
On Oct. 2, Ayaad Assaad, a U.S. government scientist and former biowarfare researcher, received a call from an FBI agent asking him to come in for a talk. It was well before anthrax panic gripped the nation -- in fact, it was the same day that photo editor Robert Stevens, 63, was admitted to a Florida hospital. It wasn't until the next day that Stevens was diagnosed with inhalation anthrax, and another two days later, on Oct. 5, when he would become the first of five eventual fatalities caused by the apparent bioterrorist attack.
The day after hearing from the FBI, Assaad met with special agents J. Gregory Lelyegian and Mark Buie in the FBI's Washington field office, along with Assaad's attorney, Rosemary McDermott. They showed Assaad a detailed, unsigned, computer-typed letter with a startling accusation: that the 53-year-old Assaad, an Environmental Protection Agency scientist who filed an age discrimination suit against the U.S. Army for dismissing him from a biowarfare lab, might be a bioterrorist.
"Dr. Assaad is a potential biological terrorist," the letter stated, according to Assaad and McDermott. The letter was received by the FBI in Quantico, Va., but Assaad did not learn from the FBI where it had been mailed from. "I have worked with Dr. Assaad," the letter continued, "and I heard him say that he has a vendetta against the U.S. government and that if anything happens to him, he told his sons to carry on."
According to Assaad, "The letter-writer clearly knew my entire background, my training in both chemical and biological agents, my security clearance, what floor where I work now, that I have two sons, what train I take to work, and where I live.
What the hell is going on here?
Labels: anthrax, Bruce Ivins, conspiracy theories, FBI
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