[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Trump Says Coca-Cola Agreed On Major Reformulation To Use Real Cane Sugar

Garland Favorito and VoterGA Appeal Inexplicable Dismissal of Curling vs. Raffensperger Election Ruling

Born to Revolution: The “Red Diaper Baby” Roots of Zohran Mamdani and Today’s Democrats

These Are Richest People In Every US State

Education Department Investigates Foreign Funding At University Of Michigan After Arrests of Chinese Scholars

Israel editing WIkipedia, Former Israeli Prime Minister Debunks Epstein

Paul Joseph Watson:

The Duran: Decisive battle for Pokrovsk

MUST WATCH: Radical Change to the Financial System Is Maybe Coming Sooner Than We Thought

Putin launches MASSIVE strike on Ukraine, Trump admits Ukraine CAN'T win - Col. Douglas Macgregor

BREAKING: POLITICAL EARTHQUAKE: DOJ FIRES Maurene Comey, Federal Prosecutor Who Filed Key Court Docs to Keep Epstein Files Under Seal

Jimmy Dore: CHINA & 20 Nations To Intervene & End Israel’s Genocide!

20,000 Women. 350 Kilometers. Zero Pay. In One Week. How Did Ibrahim Traore Pull This Off?

Spain is in CHAOS! Revolution is in the air

Joe Rogan Ambushes Gavin Newsom Via Text With A COVID Question He Never Saw Coming

Batman Vs The Joker: Democrats Will Double Down On Chaos To Save Their Party

US Vows To Quit IEA If The Agency Keeps Pushing Green Transition

Tucker Carlson: People Are Frustrated That Certain Commit Crimes With Impunity

No news again, but the battle of the machines marches on...

Cash Jordan: Rioters ATTACK ICE HQ… Troops FLATTEN Uprising With ‘Zero Mercy’

Doctor Reveals What COVID Vaccines Do to the Lungs in Just One Week

Sorry paid off influencers, MAGA bot accounts, and Satan....but I'm not going to just "move on"

Marjorie Taylor Greene Bombshell Interview

Welcome To The Land Of The Free... Until You Express An Opinion

Putin ‘tells Iran to accept nuclear deal with no enrichment’

76% of Honey at Stores is Fake

"225,000 Ukrainians have now DESERTED the war" Ukraine is in a death spiral Col. Dan Davis

The New York Times Finally Stops Avoiding The G-Word

The Gaza Water Massacre: What Israel Just Confessed About Shooting Children

Powerful ERUPTION spit out volcanic mud and debris - Army Personnel ran for their lives


Science/Tech
See other Science/Tech Articles

Title: A lone anthrax mailer? Skeptics question FBI case
Source: AP
URL Source: http://wiredispatch.com/news/?id=294692
Published: Aug 14, 2008
Author: MATT APUZZO
Post Date: 2008-08-14 06:33:54 by Ada
Keywords: None
Views: 122
Comments: 1

Was Ivins the lone anthrax mailer? Skeptics, conspiracy theorists question FBI case

The story has all the ingredients for a good conspiracy theory: a killer germ created in a secret government lab, a government on the brink of war, a murder investigation with unanswered questions, and a suspect who committed suicide before he could be charged.

The Justice Department considers the 2001 anthrax attacks solved, but for skeptics and conspiracy theorists, it's far from over.

It has been a week since authorities laid out much of their case against Bruce Ivins, a psychologically troubled Army scientist who killed himself as prosecutors prepared to charge him as the lone anthrax killer. Since then, armchair investigators, bloggers and scientists have pored over hundreds of pages of documents and circulated their own ideas about what happened.

"I think it's going to be one of the great conspiracy theories, like whether we landed on the moon or whether Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone" to assassinate President Kennedy, said Edward Lake, a retired Wisconsin computer specialist whose Web site has for years been one of the most comprehensive repositories for analysis on the anthrax case.

The ideas being kicked around run from the slightly suspicious to the farfetched. Some are meticulously researched, others thrown together with little if any documentation. For the most part they fit into one of three categories, which sometimes overlap:

_Scientific skeptics want to know more about the DNA analysis the FBI used to focus on Ivins and exactly how investigators ruled out others in the Ft. Detrick laboratory. Some former co-workers who question whether Ivins could have carried out the attacks. Others simply believe Ivins was an easy target and they want more evidence from the FBI.

"There are a lot of people in science who are weird or unstable," said Courtney Hodges, a biophysics graduate student at the University of California at Berkeley who blogs about science and culture at HodgesLab.org. "I don't consider myself among the hardcore conspiracy theorists, that this is a total cover-up. It looks more like bungled investigation."

_Watchdogs and others recall the Bush administration asserting a rock solid case for war in Iraq, only to find glaring holes in the intelligence. They note that the anthrax attacks helped drum up support for war and they question whether Ivins is a convenient way to make the case disappear.

Glenn Greenwald, a columnist at Salon.com, has tugged at the holes in the government's evidence and called for a full accounting of the case. Meryl Nass, a Maine doctor who runs an anthrax-related Web site, says she doesn't know whether Ivins was involved but says she knows who benefited: biotech and pharmaceutical companies, neoconservatives and those who supported more wartime executive authority.

"These are people with what appears to be a potential significant motive," Nass said. "Were I an FBI agent, I would be investigating them to see whether they actually had means and opportunity to carry out an attack like this."

_Conspiracy theorists believe the government was behind the attacks. Some believe the anthrax letters were part of a "false flag" covert operation, in which the U.S. government plotted against its citizens to win public support for war. Often, that story line ends with the government killing Ivins to cover its tracks and close the case.

"They didn't decide to pin the job on Bruce Ivins after they sent out the anthrax letters, they had already decided on using him beforehand," Ken Adachi, editor of the site Educate-Yourself.org, wrote last week in a posting entitled, "Bruce E. Ivins, The Government's Latest Fall Guy."

Others, especially anti-Jewish writers, blame the attack on a Zionist plot, with the anthrax being smuggled out a decade earlier by a Jewish scientist caught sneaking into the lab late at night.

One flaw in that theory is that the scientist is not Jewish — at least not according to his wedding announcement, which said he was Catholic. Another is that, according to the FBI's genetic analysis, the deadly anthrax wasn't created until years later — by Ivins.

University of Florida law professor Mark Fenster, an author of a book on conspiracy theories, said the anthrax case is perfect for conspiracy theorists because it is "as dangerous as it could possibly be, and also deeply mysterious." The Bush administration's penchant for secrecy doesn't help, nor does its intelligence failures on Iraq, he said.

There are also several unanswered questions that the FBI can only theorize about. For instance, investigators can't place Ivins in New Jersey when the letters were mailed. And they can't say for sure how he could have converted the anthrax into a powder, a process other scientists said would have been difficult to perform without being noticed.

And then there's Ivins, who cannot defend himself.

"It's almost a generic aspect of conspiracy theories that some of the most important witnesses, or the fall guy for that matter — think Lee Harvey Oswald — is now dead because they can't contradict or complicate a conspiracy theory," Fenster said.

Hodges, the graduate student, said the Ivins case reminds him of the mysterious death of another Army former Ft. Detrick scientist, Frank Olson. The official explanation was that, in 1953, Olson unwittingly took LSD in a CIA experiment and leaped to his death from a 13th-floor window. His family says he was murdered to maintain secrets about government weapons programs.

As for Ivins, Hodges said a biologist would have known that a Tylenol overdose is a long and painful way to commit suicide.

Capitol Hill lawmakers have pledged to investigate the anthrax attacks and the FBI's response to them. Congressional hearings will answer some questions. Others may never be answered.

Lake, who runs the Web site AnthraxInvestigation.com, says the evidence so far suggests Ivins was the anthrax killer, even though it runs counter to his long-held theory that two men acted together.

But he wants to know more about the genetic analysis. He wants to know whether the anthrax really was "weaponized" as suggested early in the case and, if so, how Ivins learned how to do it. Those questions will silence some critics, he said, but not all.

"I've seen the theories that he was a pawn like Lee Harvey Oswald. That's going to be hard to disprove," he said. "How do you disprove that a dead man was not a puppet being manipulated by the CIA? You're talking about proving a negative. You can't prove aliens didn't mail the letters."

___

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Ada (#0)

Others, especially anti-Jewish writers, blame the attack on a Zionist plot, with the anthrax being smuggled out a decade earlier by a Jewish scientist caught sneaking into the lab late at night.

One flaw in that theory is that the scientist is not Jewish — at least not according to his wedding announcement, which said he was Catholic. Another is that, according to the FBI's genetic analysis, the deadly anthrax wasn't created until years later — by Ivins.

Look at the zionists making hay here, look at the verbal gyrations, the smeary word games, the hoary old religion hugging. Disgusting media talmudic supremacist garbage.

Ivins was a zionist, and zog fabricates/destroys evidence.

nobody  posted on  2008-08-14   12:35:28 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]