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OMFG - ANOTHER case of Anthrax

glen

Lifer
FBI Takes Over Anthrax Case
By AMANDA RIDDLE, Associated Press Writer

BOCA RATON, Fla. (AP) - The FBI on Monday took over the investigation into the anthrax death of a Florida man after the germ was found in the nose of a co-worker and on a computer keyboard in their office. Hundreds of people who worked near the men lined up to get medical tests.

Attorney General John Ashcroft said the case could become ``a clear criminal investigation.''

``We don't have enough information to know whether this could be related to terrorism or not,'' he said during a news conference in Washington.

The FBI sealed off the Boca Raton building housing several supermarket tabloids, including The Sun, where both men worked. Agents donned protective gear before going inside.

How the bacterial spores got into the newspaper's office remained under investigation. Federal investigators handling the cases have eliminated the obvious environmental sources of anthrax, said Barbara Reynolds, a spokeswoman for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.

Sen. Bob Graham, D-Fla., said CDC officials told him that ``human intervention'' was the likely cause of contamination.

Health officials insisted there was no public health threat, but there was unease among some of the 500 people waiting for antibiotics and anthrax tests at the Palm Beach County health agency Monday.

``I feel nervous. I'm worried for everybody,'' said David Hayes, an editor for the Star tabloid who works in the building. Test results are expected to take days or weeks in some cases.

Anthrax cannot be spread from person to person, but all 300 people who work in the building - and anyone who spent more than an hour inside since Aug. 1 - were advised to visit health officials.

Antibiotics can treat anthrax, though the form that killed Sun photography editor Bob Stevens is particularly lethal. Stevens, 63, died Friday of inhalation anthrax, the first such fatality in the United States since 1976.

The anthrax exposure case reported Monday involved a mailroom employee identified by co-workers as 73-year-old Ernesto Blanco. Health officials said he had anthrax bacteria in his nasal passages, but he has not been diagnosed with the disease.

Blanco was tested for anthrax because he happened to be in a hospital for what co-workers said was an unrelated heart problem.

He was in stable condition at a Miami-area hospital, authorities said. Relatively large anthrax spores that lodge in the upper respiratory tract are less dangerous than smaller spores that get into the lungs.

Reynolds said authorities may never know whether he actually had anthrax because antibiotics may have killed it before it was detected.

Anthrax can be contracted from farm animals or soil, but the bacterium is not normally found among the wildlife or livestock in Florida. Stevens was described as an avid outdoorsman and gardener.

``When you have two cases in the same building and a positive sample from the environment in that building and no wool sorters or animal hides in that building, it lowers the likelihood of it coming from the environment,'' Reynolds said, reading a statement from CDC Director Jeffrey Koplan.

State epidemiologist Dr. Steven Wiersma said tests will help determine whether the anthrax found in the second victim was natural or genetically engineered. Health officials have said the bacteria in Stevens' blood responded to antibiotics, indicating that it was natural.

He and other health officials said there was no reason for alarm.

``The risk is low,'' said Dr. John Agwunobi, Florida secretary of health. He said the sample of anthrax that was found in the building was taken from Stevens' computer.

Elsewhere, a state official in Virginia confirmed that health officials there were monitoring a possible case of anthrax at a northern Virginia hospital.

Prince William Hospital in Manassas, Va., contacted the state health department with a possible anthrax diagnosis, ``one of several possible diagnoses'' for the victim, whose name was not released, said M. Boyd Marcus, Gov. Jim Gilmore's chief of staff. He said a germ culture from the victim was transported to a state laboratory in Richmond on Monday evening and would take at least 24 hours to analyze.

The state government was told that the Virginia victim had either been an employee of or a contractor for The Sun, Marcus said. He had no details, and he said it wasn't known whether the victim had been in Florida of late or had had direct contact with Blanco or Stevens.

The Sept. 11 terrorist attacks have raised fears of bioterrorism across the country, and focused particular concern on the origin of the anthrax here.

Stevens lived about a mile from an air strip where flight school owner Marian Smith said suspected hijacker Mohamed Atta rented planes. Several suspected hijackers also visited a crop-dusting business in Belle Glade, 40 miles from Stevens' home in Lantana.

David Pecker, chief executive of the tabloids' publisher, American Media, said he did not believe the company was being targeted by terrorists because of how the papers have covered the attacks and suspected terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden.

Newsweek magazine reported on its Web site Monday that the office received a ``weird love letter to Jennifer Lopez'' a week before the Sept. 11 attacks. Inside was what was described as a ``soapy, powdery substance'' and a Star of David charm. The letter was handled by both Stevens and Blanco, according to unidentified workers cited by Newsweek.

Bennet Bolton, a senior reporter for The National Enquirer, told The Associated Press on Monday about a ``cryptic'' e-mail sent to the staff in late August or early September by an intern who worked in the newsroom this summer.

``It intrigued us that he left such a cryptic farewell,'' Bolton said. ``It was rather neutral and then he said, 'I left you a surprise for you to remember me by. Ha ha, just kidding.'''

He said federal investigators were told about the e-mail. The FBI did not return several phone calls seeking comment about it.

Only 18 cases of inhalation anthrax were reported in the United States during the 20th century, the most recent in 1976 in California. Without treatment, 90 percent of victims die within days. More common is a less serious form of anthrax contracted through the skin.

Federal officials are sending Florida 100 cases of antibiotics to back up the local supply. The antibiotics came from a federal stockpile that holds enough to treat 2 million cases of anthrax.

An injectable anthrax vaccine has been around since the 1970s, but it limited to military use. It is reportedly not in production.
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/htx/ap/20011009/us/anthrax_case_34.html
 
Man this sucks. 🙁 I woke up feeling sick today and although there's no real reason to think it's not just a regular cold, ideas still run through my head.
 
This from CNN...



<< A doctor at a Manassas, Virginia, hospital on Tuesday said a man who was thought to have been exposed to anthrax has preliminarily tested negative for the deadly bacteria. "His condition right now is not consistent with anthrax," said Dr. Thomas Ryan of Prince William Hospital. >>




 
I hope that this is an isolated incident. If this is caused by a person, this could get really ugly really fast
 
tweak did you even read it?

2 cases have been confirmed in florida, and one is suspected in Virginia... those cant possibly be isolated...
 
GTaudiophile, good outlook! Like I am saying, I could die from Anthrax, I could die from a plane hitting my building, I could die crossing the street. I am not going to live what could be the last days of my life in fear.
 
Published Tuesday, October 9, 2001

Anthrax quarantines Boca Raton office
BY MANNY GARCIA, LISA ARTHUR AND LARRY LEBOWITZ
magarcia@herald.com

Investigators are examining whether anthrax found in two workers at a Boca Raton publishing company may have been ``biologically engineered,'' which would make it unlikely that the men -- one of whom died last week -- were exposed to the bacteria by accident.

Teams of specially trained FBI agents from all over the country descended Monday on the offices of supermarket tabloid publisher American Media Inc. to look for clues why a photo editor died from anthrax Friday and a mailroom employee tested positive for spores in his nasal passage on Sunday.

The mailroom employee, Ernesto Blanco, 73, has not contracted the disease but discovery of anthrax in his nasal passages heightened U.S. concern over a possible bioterrorism threat and turned what had been a medical mystery into a criminal investigation led by the FBI.

Blanco delivered mail throughout AMI, which publishes The Sun, The National Enquirer and The Globe, among other publications -- including on the second floor where deceased photo editor Bob Stevens worked and where investigators found traces of anthrax on a computer keyboard.

Sen. Bob Graham, Florida's senior senator and chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said federal health officials told him at a briefing Monday that ``human intervention'' had to be involved in the anthrax cases.

Graham said Dr. Jeffrey Koplan, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director, told him the possibility that the anthrax germ was spread ``by anything other than human intervention was nil to none.''

Graham, a Democrat, said he is ``worried'' by the anthrax cases, but had ``no reason to suspect'' they were linked to the hijackers in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks -- some of whom had lived in nearby Delray Beach.

Investigators are, however, reviewing the names of several subscribers of one tabloid whose names are similar to those of two hijackers.

Investigators also interviewed a Florida Atlantic University student who interned at the publishing house. The student left a rambling e-mail saying he was leaving employers ``presents.''

Health officials told criminal investigators Monday night that they think the bacteria entered the building between Sept. 23 and 25. Doctors said they made this determination based on when the two men and a female librarian at American Media Inc. first showed symptoms of an illness.

The woman, Martha Moffett, 67, a longtime librarian at the company, was treated for pneumonia symptoms last week and released from JFK Medical Center in Atlantis after testing negative for anthrax. She told The Herald late Monday that she was asked by Dr. Larry Bush -- the physician who treated Stevens for anthrax -- to come in for a second test today.

``I'm glad to have two tests,'' Moffett said. ``All my friends are telling me how lucky I am to have pneumonia. I don't think they believe I have it.''

Even as health officials continued to urge calm, fears of bioterrorism surged and co-workers of the two men flooded a Delray Beach health clinic after being told to report there for screening and antibiotics.

The Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta shipped in a two-week supply of antibiotics to treat people who have been in the American Media building since Aug. 1, including Tetracycline, Amoxycillin and Ciprofloxacin.

The sense of panic began for some late Sunday night, when American Media began contacting employees after health officials confirmed that the anthrax bacteria had been found in swabs taken from Blanco's nasal cavity.

Officials immediately shuttered the company's offices and ordered the company's 300 employees to be tested.

``We have to assume the worst -- that this was a planned criminal attack,'' said a federal source familiar with the probe. ``At this point it's conjecture, except we have two employees who worked inside the same building and both were exposed to the same rare bacteria, and one is dead.''

``We are taking this very seriously,'' Attorney General John Ashcroft told reporters in Washington during an afternoon news conference. ``We regard this as something that could clearly become a criminal investigation.''

By lunchtime, the FBI had mobilized hazardous materials experts from across the country to the tabloid's offices, taking the precaution of giving antibiotics to agents before they interviewed people.

Without determing a motive, investigators have focused on the possibility that anthrax spores were introduced into the three-story, 66,000-square foot building via the mail or air ducts.

Hazmat investigators are examining every air vent. Agents also are examining how mail is delivered throughout the building and developing lists of people with access to the publishing house, including disgruntled former workers, summer interns, customers, delivery drivers or construction workers.

One point of interest for investigators: How construction workers entered the premises, where a new cafeteria is being built.

But so far, investigators say they have found no suspicious names in the log-in sheet.

Agents are also curious about a bomb threat against the publishing house on Sept. 14 -- three days after the suicide attacks at the World Trade Center and the Pentagon that killed thousands. Boca Raton police responded to that threat, investigators say, and determined it was false.

``They write controversial stories,'' a federal law enforcement source said. ``They [anger] a lot of people. You could see why some people may be angry.''

Blanco, from Northeast Miami-Dade, was being treated for pneumonia in a Miami-Dade hospital last week when Stevens' anthrax was confirmed.

Blanco was among three people health officials had tested for anthrax last week and initially cleared. Additional tests of the nasal swab, confirmed Sunday night, showed signs he had been exposed to anthrax but not that he had been infected by it, said Dr. Landis Crockett, director of disease control for the Florida Department of Health.

Tim O'Connor, spokesman for the Palm Beach County Health Department, said Stevens and Blanco did not know each other.

Florida Health Secretary John Agwunobi urged any employees or visitors ``who have spent more than an hour'' in the American Media building since Aug. 1 to go to the Delray Beach Health center.

The Health Department also set up a hot line, 1-800-342-3557, for anyone employed in the building or who has visited the building since Aug. 1.

Hundreds of American Media employees received middle-of-the-night telephone calls Sunday directing them to immediately report to the Health Department for tests.

``This is just a nightmare,'' one employee said. ``First we get the all clear on Friday and everybody takes this big sigh of relief, and then this. None of us are being told anything. We are all told to report for tests in the middle of the night, but they can only take four at a time. Some of us were there all night waiting to be tested.''

At the Palm Beach Health Department annex in Delray Beach on Monday, those who showed up for testing were given a nose swab and were asked to fill out a questionnaire.

The form included about 10 questions asking whether the person had felt sick in the past two weeks -- headache, fever or shortness of breath -- and also asked whether they had spent any time in the building's text library, photo library or mail room.

All those who underwent testing Monday were also given a 15-day supply of antibiotics. They will have to take the drugs for 60 days.

Outside the American Media offices, officers from the Boca Raton Police Department began shortly after noon to string yellow crime scene tape on banyan trees, ringing the perimeter of the building and its parking lot at 5401 NW Broken Sound Blvd. in Boca.

Shortly after that, hazardous materials from the Boca Raton Fire and Rescue Department began arriving in large mobile units marked ``special operation.'' They began wheeling out large yellow metal drums, carrying round plastic tubs and running water hoses, which they then used to wash down the parking lot where they set up a staging area.

As more than a half dozen emergency vehicles arrived at the site the level of paranoia became palpable. Several people were seen wearing surgical masks as they drove into the office park, which includes several office buildings, restaurants and a golf course.

As the afternoon wore on, the American Media parking lot was transformed into a massive staging area -- evoking a scene from the television program The X-Files -- for whatever investigation the FBI is planning to undertake.

The parking lot was filled with emergency personnel, plainclothes police detectives, two large Budget rental moving vans, several unmarked refrigerated trailers and several cars and vans emblazon with BellSouth logos. Five or six BellSouth employees appeared to be surveying the scene to set up some kind of communications system.

About 5 p.m, members of the Boca Raton hazmat team began suiting up in white jumpers covering them from neck to toe. They wore green boots and white gloves.

A sure sign that emergency personnel planned to be in the parking lot for a while: the arrival of two portable toilet units.

Herald staff writers Lesley Clark, Oscar Corral, Frank Davies, Amy Driscoll, Gail Epstein Nieves, David Green, David Kidwell, Renato P&eacute;rez and William Yardley contributed to this report, as did Lenny Savino in the Herald's Washington Bureau.

 
The Virginia case has been determined NOT to be Anthrax. I heard the doctor this morning on the radio. CAT Scan, all lab tests are negative except for a high white blood cell count (but this would happen even if the person just has a common cold).
 
right GTaudiophile, there's gonna be lots of these kind of odd, possibly coincidental things going on and we just have to get on with the business of living our lives and not jump every time the media spins out a new story.
 
OK.......how's this for a "lead" the FBI is apparently looking in to........Got this in a "Newsbrief" email and found it so damned funny I had to post it here although I suppose it is possible:

  • 10/09/01 - Mideast madman Osama bin Laden may have been so enraged when the supermarket tabloid Globe Magazine reported on his failed attempts to woo an American woman that he targeted Globe headquarters in Boca Raton, Fl., with an anthrax attack, the Washington Post speculated Tuesday morning.

    "The Globe and the National Enquirer -- have been exceptionally tough on bin Laden," the paper noted.

    Citing the latest Globe report that called bin Laden "a shameful hypocrite, condoning gang-rape, drinking and carousing by his military captains," the Post observed:

    "The Oct. 2 issue of the Globe was more incendiary. In a story headlined 'The Face of Evil,' a former CIA agent was quoted as saying bin Laden's rage toward Americans is rooted in being ridiculed by an American woman years ago for having underdeveloped sexual organs."

    The Globe shares offices with its American Media sister publications the National Enquirer, the National Examiner and the Sun. Sun employee Bob Stevens died Friday after being poisoned by anthrax.

    Stevens' American Media co-worker Ernesto Blanco tested positive for anthrax exposure on Monday.

    The FBI is currently investigating the anthrax outbreak as a possible terrorist attack, with Florida public health officials urging all 300 employees at AM's Boca Raton headquarters to get anthrax tests.
 


<< "The Oct. 2 issue of the Globe was more incendiary. In a story headlined 'The Face of Evil,' a former CIA agent was quoted as saying bin Laden's rage toward Americans is rooted in being ridiculed by an American woman years ago for having underdeveloped sexual organs."
>>


Let's buy him a Ferrari, and maybe he will go away.
 
I wish the hospitals/CDC would confirm with 100% certainty if it's Antrax or not before leaking it to the media and spreading pandamonium.
 
http://www.nypost.com/news/nationalnews/31567.htm


...One employee, 63-year-old photo editor Bob Stevens, died last week of inhalation anthrax, while a second, identified by sources as mailroom worker Ernesto Blanco, was found to have a small amount of anthrax in his nose.

David Pecker, the president of American Media, told The Post that a woman librarian at the office building already being treated for pneumonia tested positive for anthrax exposure, in addition to the other two cases.

Florida health officials said late yesterday that only two people had come into contact with the bacteria.

 
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