US Senate powder tests positive for ricin ( 2004-02-03 13:38) (Agencies)
Preliminary tests of a white powder discovered in a Senate office building
Monday were positive for the potentially deadly poison ricin, the US Capitol
Police chief said.
Two out of three tests indicate ricin, Chief Terrance Gainer said at a
late-evening news conference. The third test came out negative, and a fourth,
more definitive test was under way, with results expected Tuesday.
Sixteen people who were on the floor where the white powder was discovered on
mail were being decontaminated and would be allowed to go home, Gainer said.
"At the moment we're in a wait-and-see position from an analytical point of
view in what next steps we may take," he said. That included what, if any
decontamination of the Dirksen Senate Office Building would be needed.
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., also at the news conference, said
no symptoms were reported by those near the powder. "Everybody's fine" and there
is "no cause for alarm," he said.
"Nobody is sick, we don't expect anybody to get sick," said Frist, a surgeon
before his election to the Senate.
The powder was discovered at about 3 p.m. in a mail room near Frist's office
on the fourth floor of the Dirksen Building, Gainer said. A congressional
official had said earlier the powder was found in Frist's office suite.
Another government official said lab tests were being conducted at Fort
Detrick in Maryland, but Gainer refused to give any location.
Authorities do not know if the substance was found on a letter or a package,
the chief said.
The Homeland Security Department is monitoring the situation, spokesman Brian
Roehrkasse said.
Ricin, derived from the castor bean plant, can kill within days. Twice as
deadly as cobra venom, ricin is relatively easily made. It may be inhaled,
ingested or injected.
Police found traces of ricin in a north London apartment last January and
arrested seven men of North African origin in connection with the virulent toxin
that has been linked to al-Qaida terrorists and Iraq.
A package containing ricin was also found at a post facility serving
Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport in South Carolina in October.
An FBI official said the bureau was awaiting the result of tests at the Fort
Detrick laboratory before deciding whether to get more fully involved in the
case.
Mail to congressional offices has been irradiated since deadly anthrax was
found in letters sent to the offices of Sens. Tom Daschle, D-S.D., and Patrick
Leahy, D-Vt., in 2001. No one was arrested in those incidents.
Frist said irradiation would likely have no effect on ricin because the
substance is neither a virus or a bacterium.