Sacramento Man Arrested on Suspicion of Sending Anthrax Packages

By Alice Carver
13:30, October 30th 2008
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Sacramento Man Arrested on Suspicion of Sending Anthrax Packages

The FBI on Wednesday arrested Marc M. Keyser, 66, on suspicion of mailing 120 hoax anthrax letters nationwide. He has been charged with sending more than 100 packages marked “anthrax” to media outlets in Sacramento and to others in the states of Washington and North Carolina, including the Atlantic Monthly office in Washington, D.C.; the Charlotte Observer; and KCRA-TV in Sacramento. The envelopes contained a compact disk with a packet of sugar labelled “Anthrax Sample” along with an orange biohazard symbol, according to the FBI. The phrase “Anthrax Shock and Awe Terror” was also imprinted on the CD.

Other envelopes were sent to media organizations, a congressional office and at least two restaurants, authorities said. So far, field tests determined the contents of the envelopes were not anthrax.

“Several of these packages have been collected and sent to the FBI laboratory in Quantico, Va., for processing,” the FBI said. “At this point, none of the contents have tested positive for biohazardous material.” The FBI has not yet checked the content of the CD.

The main suspect, Marc Keyser was arrested without incident and he is being held at the Sacramento County jail. At least one of the letters had Keyser’s return address on them. The man is expected to make his first court appearance Thursday.

One of the packages was delivered to the Union Tribune. The Union Tribune newsroom was evacuated and members of a hazardous material team went into the building to test the large envelope labelled “anthrax.”

The Seattle-Post Intelligencer and the Seattle Times received similar packages. Emergency crews wearing protective suits had tested the contents of the packages and determined it was harmless, according to the FBI.

FBI agent Steve Dupre said the arrest is not connected to another series of bogus mailings containing a white powder that were sent to financial institutions last week.

More mailings will probably be received over the next period; recipients of these mailings are advised to contact their local FBI office so that FBI officers can collect the packages, Dupre said.

Keyser was president or the contact person for a number of groups and organizations including Business Terror Watch, Call And Save Taiwan, AIDS Initiative, AIDS Watch, Save Our Schools, Neighborhood Terror Watch, and Save Our Redwoods Inc.

Anthrax is an acute disease in humans and animals caused by the bacterium Bacillus anthracis which is highly lethal in some forms. Its spores can be grown in vitro and be used as a biological weapon. When spores are inhaled, or come into contact with a skin lesion on a host they reactivate and multiply rapidly. The infections are easily treated if they are caught early. If someone has inhaled anthrax, the chances of survival are best if antibiotic treatment begins within 48 hours.

In the anthrax attacks that occurred less than a month after the September 11, 2001, suicide attacks, five people died; two of them were postal workers. The anthrax mailings that were contaminated with anthrax spores were sent to media organizations and politicians. After the anthrax attacks, thousands of people took antibiotics to prevent infection in case of exposure to the deadly spores.



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