Some Find Relief, but Skepticism Remains
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For years, Ernesto Blanco has been haunted by questions about who carried out the 2001 anthrax attacks, which left him hospitalized for 27 days. Yesterday, the Florida resident felt he finally got some answers.
(Washington Post — 7 August, 2008)
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Federal authorities today began unveiling some of the evidence they have amassed against Bruce E. Ivins, the bioweapons researcher who became the prime suspect in the 2001 anthrax killings before his death by suicide last week.
(Washington Post — 7 August, 2008)
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The key clues that led the FBI to Army scientist Bruce E. Ivins ranged from the infinitesimally small — tiny bits of genetic coding on a single anthrax spore — to items as ordinary as a time stamp on a building security pass.
(Washington Post — 7 August, 2008)
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Anthrax attack suspect Bruce E. Ivins took several hours of administrative leave from his Fort Detrick, Md., laboratory on a critical day in September 2001 when the first batch of deadly letters was dropped in a New Jersey mailbox, government sources briefed on the case said yesterday.
(Washington Post — 8 August, 2008)
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