![]() The United States officially forswore biological-weapons development in 1969, and signed the 1972 Biological Weapons Convention, along with many other nations. In a more benign way, Rosenberg is trying to prove a point, too. He wound up murdering five people, and sowed fear and disruption among millions-all to prove a point to an internal audience, the tiny bioweapons community. Rosenberg thinks the perpetrator wasn't trying to kill people-hence the enclosed announcements about what was in the letters, and the admonitions to take penicillin-but he wasn't concerned enough to avoid the risk altogether. She believes he received some kind of career setback after he left Fort Detrick that caused him to become "confused, upset, depressed, angry." He decided to retaliate with the anthrax attacks, with which, Rosenberg guesses, he meant to accomplish two things: first, "he's showing somebody how good he is" at producing and distributing weaponized anthrax, and thus proving that the career setback was unwarranted and, second, he wanted to get the government to invest more in bioweapons research, which would mean a budget increase for his current employer. ![]() He is, as Rosenberg puts it, "not a normal person," and has a pattern of erratic behavior. ![]() The perpetrator now works for a Washington-area subcontractor to the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, at Fort Detrick, Maryland, and who was familiar with the method of weaponizing anthrax devised by William Patrick III, the longtime head of bioweapons research at Fort Detrick. Here is Rosenberg's theory: All of the anthrax letters were sent by one person, a middle-aged man who had worked at the U.S. had a prime suspect who sounded a lot like Rosenberg's, an array of top government officials, including Ari Fleischer, of the White House, and Robert Mueller III, of the F.B.I., were forced to address it-which is to say, deny it-publicly. Although several local newspapers and the online magazine Salon ran articles on Rosenberg, it took a surprisingly long time-nearly three weeks-for her sensational Web posting to make an official impact, but on February 25th, after the Washington Times published a story that the F.B.I. About the perpetrator she has in mind, she asked, "Does he know something that he believes is sufficiently damaging to the United States to make him untouchable by the F.B.I.?" It's important to note that, in addition to being an expert, Rosenberg has a political agenda: she is a committed campaigner for outside monitoring of biological-weapons laboratories. was moving much more slowly in its anthrax investigation than it had any reason to. Dragging Its Feet?," in which she strongly implied that the F.B.I. On February 5th, Rosenberg posted an item on a Web site that she maintains for the Federation of American Scientists called "Commentary: Is the F.B.I. Yet her theory sounds like the plot of a conspiracy thriller, which is not usually true of experts' theories, especially on matters this grave. In 1998, she was one of a group of seven scientists who were invited to the White House to brief President Clinton on the subject. Rosenberg is, to use the technical term, not chopped liver: she is a veteran molecular biologist and one of the world's leading experts on biological weapons. Barbara Hatch Rosenberg, a slight woman with short graying hair and deeply concerned hazel eyes, who works out of a small office at the State University of New York at Purchase, thinks she knows who was responsible for the anthrax attacks last October. The Minneapolis Star Tribune, CNN and wire services contributed to this report. The new report is limited to an evaluation of the scientific evidence and does not assess the guilt or innocence of anyone connected to the case. But taken on its own, the science doesn’t prove Ivins did it, the panel says. The panel concludes that scientific evidence is consistent with the idea that Bruce Ivins could have been the perpetrator of the anthrax attacks that killed five people in 2001. 15, 2011: A group of independent scientists convened by the National Academies of Sciences releases a review of the science used in the FBI investigation. Ivins, alone, mailed the anthrax letters.”įeb. According to the DOJ report: “Evidence developed from investigation established that Dr. Postal Inspection Service formally conclude their investigations of the anthrax mailings. 19, 2010: The FBI, Department of Justice, and the U.S. 17, 2008: FBI Director Robert Mueller tells the Senate Judiciary Committee that the FBI will seek an independent review of the scientific evidence of the anthrax case “because of the importance of the science to this particular case and perhaps cases in the future.”įeb.
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