The Anthrax Conspiracy Theories Page
By
Richard M. Smith
of
www.ComputerBytesMan.com
Updated June 9, 2002
-
Have employees in the U.S. biodefense program already identified a former coworker as the anthrax perp? That's
an extraordinary claim that was recently made in a New York Times editorial:
Connecting Deadly Dots, By Nicholas D. Kristof
"These experts point, for example, to one middle-aged
American who has worked for the United States military
bio-defense program and had access to the labs at Fort
Detrick, Md. His anthrax vaccinations are up to date,
he unquestionably had the ability to make first-rate
anthrax, and he was upset at the United States government
in the period preceding the anthrax attack."
Does this person have a name? What's his beef with the U.S. Government?
What kind of follow-up is the FBI doing on this lead? [6/8/02]
-
Does the FBI already know that the anthrax used in the anthrax attacks had to come from either Fort Detrick in Maryland or
the Dugway Proving Grounds in Utah? Is that why the FBI is subjecting 200 employees at these two U.S. biodefense labs to
polygraph tests? Although the FBI refuses to say
why they are polygraphing so many biodefense researchers, Debora MacKenzie writing in
New Scientist magazine
connected the dots between the attack anthrax and the Detrick and Dugway labs. She based
here findings on the DNA fingerprinting work being conducted by the
Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR) of
Rockville, Maryland. Using cutting-edge techniques,
TIGR found that the anthrax used in the attacks does not
match an anthrax sample from the biodefense research lab at Porton Down, UK, nor a sample recovered from a Texas goat
that died in 1997. However, the attack anthrax was an exact match for two other anthrax samples which TIGR
refuses to identify. Using previously published data and some detective work, Ms. MacKenzie believes that
these unidentified samples came from the Detrick and Dugway labs. [6/8/02]
-
Why did some White House staffers start taking Cipro, a powerful antibiotic used as a treatment against anthrax,
on September 11th? These precautionary measures were taken by the White House a full three weeks
before the first evidence of the U.S. anthrax attacks surfaced.
The watchdog group, Judicial Watch, is trying to find out what the White
House knew and when. They have filed a lawsuit under the provisions
of the Freedom of Information Act ("FOIA") to force the U.S. Government to say why they might have suspect
anthrax attacks on Washington, DC. Will their FOIA requests and lawsuit spring loose new clues about the anthrax
attacks that have not been made public before? [6/8/02]
-
Was the anthrax perp looking to start a war between the United States and Iraq? By tying the anthrax letters
to the 9/11 attacks, the anthrax perp had to know that Iraq would be at the top of the many people's list of
countries where professional-grade anthrax could have come from. If a war was the perp's goal, did he act
alone or was he part of a larger conspiracy? Even after
forensic evidence appears to
point back to a U.S. biodefense lab as the source of the anthrax, editorial writers at the
Washington Post and
Wall Street Journal
continue to try to pin the blame on Iraq. [6/8/02]
- Who
and why did someone try to frame
Dr. Ayaad Assaad? In late September, an unknown person
sent an anonymous letter to the FBI claiming that Dr. Assaad
was a potential bioterrorist. Dr. Assaad is
an Egyptian-born former employee of the USAMRIID labs at Fort
Detrick, Maryland.
According to press reports, Dr. Assaad was
interviewed on October 3 by the FBI and quickly cleared. Dr. Assaad now
wonders if the sender of the anonymous letter was trying to make him the
patsy for the anthrax letters. The
timing of the anonymous letter is extremely curious because the letter was
received by the FBI before there
were any media reports of any anthrax infections or letters. Perhaps the sender of this anonymous
letter and the perp are the same person. On the other hand, the sender of the
anonymous letter might have been inspired by press reports of some of the
9/11 hijackers being interested in crop-dusters. In this case, the anonymous letter is
most likely a red herring. Either
way, Dr. Assaad wouldn’t be too surprised if the
perp does turn out to be a former USAMRIID
employee. Dr. Assaad
along with two other research scientists are also now suing the US
Government for age discrimination when they were laid off from USAMRIID in
1997 as part of a 30% downsizing at the lab. [2/13/02]
- Will
Saddam Hussein become America’s
whipping boy
for the anthrax letters? Richard Perle,
former Assistant Secretary of Defense during the Reagan administration,
suggested just this in PBS
interview from last November.
Mr. Perle is concerned that Iraq
will be inspired by the anthrax letters and will become a copy-cat bioterrorist by sponsoring future anthrax attacks
against the U.S. A second Gulf war to oust Saddam from
power is Mr. Perle’s insurance policy against
these hypothetical Iraqi anthrax attacks.
What Mr. Perle doesn’t discuss is how the
US will stop the biological and chemical attacks from Iraq against Israel
and the U.S. when Saddam’s back is against the wall in a US-lead war. Even though the mainstream press pretty
much ignore this "whipping boy" issue, it was hotly debated by politically
publications on both the left and right such as The
Weekly Standard, NewsMax, The Progressive,
and the
World Socialist Web Site. [2/13/02]
- Turning
the Saddam Hussein "whipping boy" issue on its head, a newsgroup
poster wondered out loud if the anthrax letters are part of a
right-wing plot to start a war against Iraq. This plot could be modeled on Operation
Northwoods, an alleged plan in the early
1960’s by the US Joint Chief of Staffs to carry out terrorist attacks
against US targets and blame them on Cuba. The goal of this alleged operation was
to sway American and world public opinion to support a war against Cuba
to eliminate Fidel Castro. James Bamford’s book, Body
of Secrets, detailed this
operation for the first time in 2001. [2/13/02]
- Were the anthrax letters sent by an insider who either works
for or is associated with the U.S. biodefense research program? That’s
the theory
that Dr.
Barbara Hatch Rosenberg the chair of Working Group on Biological
Weapons Verification of Federation of
American Scientists has been pushing since November 2001. Her story
has started getting traction in the mainstream
media during the month of December. Particularly after the US Army admitted for
the first time that some of its research labs have been making small quantities
of weaponized anthrax for research purposes. Also, the White House has
now confirmed that the anthrax used in the anthrax letters is likely the
same Ames strain as used by US biodefense labs. No direct smoking gun has
been found yet, but the FBI is now focusing more of its investigation on U.S.
biodefense labs. Barbara’s theory does have its critics
who worry that it may lead investigator astray because it is too
speculative. In particular, the genetic data about the anthrax used in
anthrax letters is still being debated by
scientists. [12/17/01]
- Is the
Iraqi
bioweapons program the source of the anthrax used in the anthrax
letters? Iraq
is the top of many people’s list of suspects. Dr. Richard Spertzel, former head of
biological weapons inspection team for the United Nations Special Commission
on Iraq, believes that the anthrax used in the anthrax letters had to
be a product of a national bioweapons program according to his testimony
before the Committee
on International Relations. His
short list of countries that have the capabilities to make weapons-grade
anthrax is the United States,
Russia,
and Iraq,
but clearly Iraq
is his favorite according to press reports. Ironically, anthrax and other biological
agents were purchased
by Iraq
from the American Type Culture Collection
in 1986. A key figure in the Iraqi
program, Rihab
Taha (AKA, “Dr. Germ”), has degree in biology from the University of East Anglia in the
UK. [12/17/01]
- Was Bin Laden and his Al Qaeda
cronies behind
the Anthrax letters? Certainly the
person sending out the letters tried to tie the anthrax attacks into the
9/11 attacks with references to 9/11 and Allah. However, many investigators see these
references as crude misdirections. On the other
hand, why where print-outs found of Web pages from the BioPort Web site in Kabul,
Afghanistan? [1/18/02]
- Which biodefense research labs have been experimenting with
the same Ames strain which was used in the anthrax letters? According to
an article
in Washington Post, the labs are:
All of these labs had the Ames strain, but it is unclear
which labs have access to weaponized anthrax or know how to make it. The
Washington Post was only able to get this information after filing a Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) request. [12/16/01]
- The Dr.
Larry C. Ford story has it all: An attempted murder by a hired
hit man, suicide,
biological
agents in the fridge, a cache
of buried weapons in the back yard and germ
warfare experiments in South Africa. The plot sounds right out a
mystery novel, but this one is all true. The whole sordid tale was
chronicled by the Orange County
Register in series of more than 40 articles which span almost two
years. Dr. Ford was a part owner in
BioFem,
a medical products company that was
developing a vaginal suppository designed to stop the spread of AIDS. [12/15/01]
- The DOD’s
anthrax vaccination program got its start when U.S.
military officials became concerned that Iraq
would attack Allied troops with biological and chemical weapons in the
Gulf War. The program has been controversial from
the beginning with many Web sites and groups dedicated to getting the
program shutdown due to possible negative health side-effects from the
anthrax vaccines. Here is a
sampling of the anti-vaccination Web sites: Anthrax
Vaccine Home Page, Anthrax
Vaccine Network, and National Gulf War
Resource Center. The CDC is now interested also in acquiring anthrax
vaccines from the military to protect
civilians. [12/15/01]
- BioPort, the
only company licensed by the US Government to produce anthrax vaccine, had
a key research employee die under during the summer of 2000. The
company said the cause of death was a heart
attack, but the local medical examiner linked the death instead to anthrax vaccine.
More than 50
articles can be found on the Internet about this story. The
company also has a checkered
history and has been unable for more than 2 years to get FDA approval
to start up its anthrax vaccine production lines because of safety
concerns. And exactly who is Intervac LLC and how did Admiral
William J. Crowe become a part owner in BioPort
without investing any money? [12/15/01]
- Dr. Leonard G. Horowitz,
president of the Tetrahedron
Publishing Group, has put together the mother-of-all-conspiracy
theories about the anthrax letters and who is behind them. Click
here for the graphics showing all the players and here
for the blow-by-blow account. [12/17/01]
- Who exactly is the former senior Battelle scientist who is
alleged to have made anthrax
threats against a Milwaukee neighbor back in September? Why was he
fired twice from Battelle,
once in 1996 and then again in 1999? Does he know the magic formula for
making professional-grade anthrax? How come ABC News is reporting this story
as new
news in December, when it is actually old news
from October? After the ABC story, the FBI is
denying that they have a particular suspect in their sites. But why is Battelle coming under increasing scrutiny
from all sides? [12/20/01]
- According
to a December
20th article in the New York Times, an Iraqi defector, Adnan Ihsan Saeed al-Haideri, personally
worked on renovations of 20 secret facilities in Iraqi engaged in
biological, chemical, and nuclear weapons research. While working at
any of these sites, did Mr. al-Haideri see any
Petri dishes marked “Anthrax – Ames
strain”? In spite of a big push by
the FBI, there have been no direct
connections found yet between the anthrax letters and the Iraqi
biological weapons program.
However, fear
of the Iraqi biological weapons program continues to be used as a marketing vehicle to
sell products, services, and technology to the U.S. Department of Defense.
[1/18/02]
- On
December 21st, British anti-terrorist police boarded at cargo
ship off the English coast in what was described as a major
security operation. How come a Scotland Yard spokesperson said
that the police weren’t specifically looking for anthrax when no one ever
asked about anthrax? [1/18/02]
- Did
someone send out the anthrax letters for financial gain? This apparently is one theory that the
FBI is investigating according to an article
in the Washington Post. The FBI
wants to know if someone hoped their company would make money off the
anthrax cleanup or off medicines used to treat anthrax. Many companies do stand to benefit
financially from the anthrax cleanup, but would someone really commit
mass-murder to make a buck or is this something that only happens in the
movies? [1/18/02]
- Anthrax
hoaxes are no laughing matter at the FBI.
They have arrested more than 40 people for sending out hoax anthrax
threats according to a December
20th press release.
One guy even wished his mom a happy birthday by including a white
powder in her birthday card! Other alleged anthrax hoaxers include a white
supremacist, two
Philadelphia cops, a
D.C. copy, and a troubled
teenager. [1/18/02]
- How
secure are America’s
stock of anthrax at U.S. Army and university research labs? Not very secure according to a recent Wall
Street Journal story. Perhaps
the perp stole the anthrax he used in the
anthrax letters. If so, how did he
know where to steal the anthrax from and how to handle it once he got
it? Also which major biological
research lab looked to hire a security person after the anthrax stories broke in the press? [1/18/02]
- Why is
the Japanese Olympic team bringing their own gas
masks to the Winter Games in Salt Lake City? Are they perhaps worried that the Dugway
Proving Ground is less than 2 hours away
from the Games? Dugway
is one of the few places in the United
States which is capable of making the
particular type of weaponized anthrax used in the anthrax letters.
[1/18/02].
- How
many “degrees
of separation” is there between the perp and the USAMRIID
researchers at Fort
Detrick, Maryland who are testing unknown samples to see if they are anthrax
or not. We
certainly hope the number is not zero!
However, if a “deep
insider” is behind the anthrax letters, then it shouldn’t be too
surprising that there is only 1 or 2 degrees of separation. [1/18/02]
- Why
was the FBI recently testing
copying machines at the Waksman Institute of Microbiology of Rutgers
University? Were they attempting to match distinctive
drum marks from a copying machine at the Institute with the marks left on
the anthrax letters which were produced on a copying machine? The Institute is located less than 30
miles from where the anthrax letters where likely mailed. Why isn’t the FBI testing copy machines
from other area universities such as Fairleigh
Dickinson, Stevens Institute of Technology, New Jersey Institute of
Technology, Rider University
and Rowan University?
[1/18/02]
- How
much can handwriting
analysis help profile the perp? Probably not much, because there is too
few writing samples to go on. CNN
however was very interested on this take on the story. [1/18/02]
- Even
the opinion pages of U.S. newspapers are
getting into anthrax conspiracy theories.
Some recent examples: New York
Times (the perp is domestic), Wall
Street Journal (the perp is foreign), and
the Honolulu
Star-Bulletin (the anagrams say its Bin Laden). Also the Baltimore Sun
and the New York
Post are now covering the amateur anthrax sleuthing story. [1/18/02]
- How
easy is it to get recipes to make bioweapons
like anthrax? According to a recent
New York
Times article it is pretty easy.
If you know what to ask for, the U.S. Government will sell you a
cook book on this Web site. Did the perp make
his own anthrax in homemade lab by following a U.S.
government recipe? Probably
not. The anthrax used in the
attacks was just too good of quality to be home brew. [1/18/02]
- According
to the Wall
Street Journal, the FBI is in the process of interviewing more than
300 current and former employees who work at government labs where anthrax
is produced. They are looking for a deep
insider who just might be the perp. However, is there a danger that the insider
theory could turn into one big witch hunt with people turning over their
quirky coworkers to the FBI for questioning? [1/18/02]
- In 1999
and 2000,
students at Princeton University
were showing a real interest in anthrax and anthrax vaccines as part of
the course Biotechnology
and Its Social Impact. Princeton
University is in the same general
area of New Jersey where the
anthrax letters were sent from. In
fact, the local Princeton post office had to be shut down
to clean up an anthrax contamination from the anthrax letters. The University has also put together an anthrax threat page
and an FAQ page.
[1/18/02]
- Between
the U.S.
Postal Service, the FBI,
and major
junk mailers, more than $2
million in reward money is being offered to help catch the person or
persons who sent out the anthrax letters.
Will this be enough reward money for someone to step forward with
key information to make an arrest or will someone hold out for even more
money. Current estimates put the damages
to the U.S.
economy at multiple billions of dollars due to clean-up efforts and
disruptions from the anthrax letters. [1/18/02]
- Is it
possible that are tests for anthrax infections are not accurate enough to
catch all cases? That’s an
interesting question raised in a recent Baltimore Sun article. If there are problems with the testing
procedures, has crucial evidence in the investigation been missed because
addition anthrax infections have not been detected? [1/18/02]
- Are
right-wing hate groups behind anthrax terror? That’s the question Anthony
York asked in a Salon article in November 2001. He feels the DOJ and FBI aren’t looking
careful enough at far right groups from the U.S.
as being the source of the anthrax letters. How these groups would have got their
hands on weaponized anthrax, he doesn’t say
however. [1/18/02]
- On
December 10th, Stephen
P. Dresch of Forensic
Intelligence International, LLC wrote a letter to the Committee on
International Relations of the
U.S. House of Representatives suggesting that investigators take a closer
look at previous bioweapons-related cases for possible connections to the
anthrax letters. His statement was
sent to the committee in response to a December
5th meeting that looked at possible sources of the anthrax
letters. In the letter, Mr. Dresch
talks about the cases of Larry C. Ford, Wouter Basson, BioPort, and
Vladimir Pasechnik. According to
his Web site, Mr. Dresch is a former member of the Michigan House of
Representatives and the former dean of economics at Michigan
Technological University. [12/17/01]
- Why are some of the world’s leading microbiologists now disappearing,
being murdered,
or dying in strange industrial accidents?
That’s the question that is being asked on the misc.survivalism newsgroup. [12/17/01]
- Why in
late 2000 was an employee of a leading US
biodefense research lab trolling at work on
USENET newsgroups for information about how to grow the anthrax
bacteria? Was his trolling efforts an official part of his job
description or was he just trying to win an innocent bar bet with his
coworkers to see if amateurs actually know how to make anthrax? [12/15/01]
- A
leading microbiologist from the former Soviet Union,
Vladimir
Pasechnik, died of a stroke on November 2001.
He was only 64. His defection in 1989 to the UK
provided first-hand accounts of the Soviet Union’s
massive biological warfare program to the West. This program was in
direct violation of the 1972 Biological
Weapons Convention and is documented in Ken
Alibek’s chilling book “Biohazard”.
Ken is another former Russian biowarrior who now
works for the American company, Hadron Advanced Biosystems
Inc. Hadron
does biodefense work for the U.S. Government. [12/17/01]
- How
come the U.S. Army’s Dugway Proving Ground in Utah
forgot to tell the scientific
community they were making professional-grade anthrax? They ‘fessed up only after a nosey Baltimore
Sun reporter started asking the tough questions. Also, why have
they been removing
Web pages from their site? [12/17/01]
- The thousands of anthrax hoax letters which have been sent
out since the first real anthrax letter found have been a real time waster
for police departments, research labs, and investigators. However, did
the sender of the real anthrax letters start off by sending hoax letters
before September? That’s a possibility that the FBI is looking into. [12/17/01]
- Clayton Lee Waagner,
a fugitive on the FBI’s 10 most wanted list, who is also suspected of
sending out more than 450 hoax anthrax letters to abortion clinics around
the U.S., was arrested
at a Kinko’s copy shop in Springdale, Ohio on December 6. He was caught when
a sharp-eyed Kinko’s employee recognized Mr. Waagner from a wanted
poster distributed by the FBI. Mr. Waagner was checking his email on
a computer at Kinko’s which he did on a regular basis while on the run. [12/17/01]
- Is
there an underground hobby for folks interesting in making anthrax? Timothy W. Tobiason sure thinks so. His self-published
book “Scientific Principles of Improvised Warfare and Home Defense” has
sold more than 2,000 copies at gun shows held in the Western part of the U.S.
The book contains a recipe for growing the anthrax bacteria that some
professional microbiologists think is just a tad too good. [12/17/01]
- And
what exactly is Larry Wayne
Harris up to? You can order his book “Biological Civil
Defense: A Civilian's Civil Defense Manual on
Biological Warfare” on the Internet for $29.50. If he really is
a biodefender, why he was convicted of mail
fraud in 1995 for illegally buying freeze-dried bubonic plague from the American Type Culture Collection?
His plague order got Congress in 1997 to tighten up the rules which
regulate who can purchase dangerous biological agents. In 1998 he
was arrested again by the FBI for possession
of anthrax. Charges were dropped
only a week later after the “anthrax” turned out to be harmless anthrax
vaccine. Mr. Harris is also convinced that Iraq
will mount a massive attack
against the U.S.
with biological weapons. Right
after September 11th, his Iraqi story then got picked
up by an Internet wellness Web site.
This site has continued
to follow the anthrax issue very closely. [12/17/01]
- Another
bioweapons “hobbyist” is Thomas
C. Leahy of Janesville, Wisconsin.
In 1998, he was sentenced
to 12 years in prison for possession of ricin, a
deadly poison made from castor beans. His defense lawyer, David Mandell, claimed that the ricin
was simply a home-made rat poison. Mr. Leahy also attempted to make
anthrax, but was not successful. [12/18/01]
- The
anthrax scare has lead to many new innovative products and services.
Here’s a sampling of a few: 2DoTrade,
Inc., Proton
Labs, Alfa Medical, Spectrum
Brands Corporation, and Vital Living
Products. [12/17/01]
- How
come a 26-year old University of
Connecticut graduate
student decided to keep around anthrax samples in his personal lab
freezer after being told to destroy the samples? [12/17/01]
- Is the media and the public overreacting to the dangers
of anthrax? Farmers
in Texas think so. Ditto for people in Tuva. [12/17/01]
- The
U.S. Congress is getting ready to spend $3 billion on biodefense
after the anthrax letter attacks.
What companies and government agencies will benefit from all this
money being given out? Here is a
list of some of the players: Battelle Memorial
Institute, Bayer,
BioPort, Bristol-Myers
Squibb, CDC, Cepheid, FDA, Hadron, Intellitec, Ion Beam
Applications, Motorola
Life Sciences, Nanosphere, U.S. Army Medical Research Institute
of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID), U.S. Public Health Service,
and Versar. [12/17/01]
- Did
the anthrax used in the anthrax letters come from CIA experiments? They say no. [12/17/01]
- Why is
the FBI raiding the houses and apartments of Pakistanis in Trenton, New Jersey
and Chester,
Pennsylvania? [12/17/01]
- Why is
the U.S. Government overpaying
for Cipro when
less-expensive alternatives
are available? Are there downsides
to Cipro being overused? How easy
is to find
Cipro on the Internet? [12/17/01]
- Did
something go wrong with Project
Bacchus and someone involved with the project make real anthrax? Project Bacchus was a secret
DOD experiment conducted at Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada
during the summer of 2000 to see if off-the-shelf equipment could be used
to make bioweapons. The project was
successful in making 2 pounds of “simulated” anthrax bacteria. The project
was conducted by the Defense Threat Reduction
Agency. [12/17/01]
- How
come the investigation of the anthrax-laced
letter to Santiago
pediatrician Antonio Banfi was dropped like a
hot potato? The letter was sent in early November and had a return address
for Mosby Inc. of Orlando,
Florida. Mosby,
a division of Harcourt, publishes health science books. Even though
the letter had a Zurich
postmark, it was sent from Florida
via the New York office of Swiss
Post International. The anthrax used in the Banfi
letter did not match the anthrax used in earlier U.S.
letters. U.S.
officials suspect laboratory
contamination in Chile
for the positive anthrax test results in the letter, but apparently have
not been able to verify the contamination. [12/18/01]
- Why is
Sultan
Bashiruddin Mahmood,
formerly of the Pakistani nuclear program, now interested in bioweapons like anthrax? [12/17/01]
- How
come Iowa State University of Ames, Iowa destroyed
its collection of anthrax samples in late September 2001 with the
blessings of the FBI? Would this collection have provided valuable
genetic information about anthrax used in the anthrax letters? [12/18/01]
- In 1993, the Aum Shinri Kyo cult of Japan
sprayed
home-grown anthrax spores from a Tokyo high-rise building for four days.
No one was hurt because the cult used a non-lethal form of anthrax. Click here for the
cult’s own “explanation” of this episode. In 1995, the cult switched to
chemical weapons and launched the now infamous terrorist
attack in the Tokyo subway system with Sarin gas in which 12 people
died and thousands of people were injured. [12/18/01]
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