Bruce Ivins, the main suspect in anthrax case sent himself an e-mail saying he new the identity of the man who sent the deadly anthrax mailings. The subject was “Finally! I know who mailed the anthrax!”
Bruce Ivins, 62, who authorities say killed himself in July as the Justice Department prepared to charge him in the anthrax case, is alleged to have sent the mail on Sept 7, 2007. But the e-mail message does not identify the attacker. In the message, Ivins says he plans on turning the information over to his lawyer who would then give it to authorities. The former biodefense researcher says he has to check a couple of things to be sure and then he can turn over the information and the final proof.
“I’m not looking forward to everybody
getting dragged through the mud, but at least it will be over,’ the e-mail
reads in an apparent reference to his colleagues at
Officials from the FBI and the Justice
Department have said that Ivins alone was responsible for the anthrax attacks. But
the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee said that the former scientist
couldn’t have worked alone in the case of the anthrax letters. He said that he
did not believe the FBI’s supposition that an Army scientist conducted the
attacks alone.
Ivins worked at Army's biodefense lab in
On the other hand, skeptics say that the government researcher was singled out because he was the “weakest link.” Most of Ivins colleagues say that his behavior only became abnormal after being pursued relentlessly by FBI.
FBI investigators have said they traced a
strain of anthrax from the envelopes that were sent to victims to a batch of anthrax
in Ivin’s lab at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute in
The anthrax attacks occurred less than a
month after the September 11, 2001, suicide attacks that killed thousands of
people in
The Justice Department decided to keep the anthrax investigation officially open after it initially said the anthrax case had been solved. “We are working to close the investigation soon,” Justice Department spokesman Dean Boyd said.