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Anthrax Easy to Get Out of Lab
The Hartford CourantPink-slipped in 1997 after 11 years working with the world's deadliest toxins at the Army biodefense lab in Fort Detrick, Md., Richard Crosland reluctantly packed a box of personal items into his red Mustang and drove home. Over the next two days,...Tags: U.S. Army, Colleges and Universities, Politics, Security Measures, Crime, Law and Justice
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FBI defends anthrax inquiry
Sun StaffThe FBI denied yesterday that anthrax investigators have smeared a former Army bioterrorism expert with leaks to the news media but said it would look into some allegations of misconduct made by Dr. Steven J. Hatfill. FBI spokesman Chris Murray said...Tags: U.S. Army, The New York Times, Crime, Law and Justice, New Jersey, Guerrilla Activity
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Bush trims his request to use force against Iraq
Sun National StaffWASHINGTON - President Bush narrowed his request to Congress yesterday for authorization to launch a unilateral attack against Iraq, offering to impose some limits on a broad resolution he proposed last week. The new language was an effort to forge a...Tags: Democratic Party, Politics, International Relations, New York, Wars and Interventions
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The trials of a citizen soldier
Sun staffFirst of two parts On the morning of his second day in the hospital, Rich Richmond's lungs filled with fluid, and blood drawn from his arm produced a culture swarming with angular strands of anthrax. Unchecked, experts knew, the bacterium could flood the...Tags: NBC (tv network), Mail Order Industry, Crime, Law and Justice, Hospitals and Clinics, Entertainment
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Anthrax researcher is fired from job at LSU
Sun StaffDr. Steven J. Hatfill, who says the federal government has ruined his life by linking him to the anthrax investigation, was fired yesterday from his job as a bioterrorism trainer at Louisiana State University. Hatfill was hired as associate director of...Tags: U.S. Army, Colleges and Universities, San Diego (San Diego, California), Politics, Crime, Law and Justice
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Missile shield testing delayed
Reflecting a new mood of cooperation with Moscow, the U.S. has delayed testing of its missile defense system while strategic arms talks are under way with Russia, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said Thursday. Rumsfeld denied at a Pentagon news...Tags: Politics, Executive Branch, Moscow (Russia), Russia, Vladimir Putin
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Anthrax-Laden Letters to Senate 'Virtually Identical'
Times Staff WritersGovernment scientists have opened the anthrax-laden letter sent to Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.) and found it to be "virtually identical" to one mailed to a colleague, Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle (D-S.D.), the FBI said Thursday. The disclosure...Tags: U.S. Army, Science and Technology, National Institutes of Health, New York, Career and Workplace
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U.S. rejects latest Taliban offer
Washington BureauPresident Bush on Sunday sternly rejected an offer by Afghanistan's Taliban regime to turn over Osama bin Laden to a neutral country, while U.S. jets began a second week of bombing by striking targets near Kabul and the area where Taliban troops are...Tags: Air and Space Accidents, Politics, New York, NBC (tv network), Wars and Interventions
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Tougher bioweapons ban asked
Special to the TribuneDeclaring that the threat posed by germ warfare and terrorism "is real and extremely dangerous," President Bush opened a campaign Thursday to strengthen and expand the provisions of a 1972 treaty banning biological weapons. His proposal would extend many...Tags: Politics, George W. Bush, Crime, Law and Justice, Guerrilla Activity, Defense
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Airstrikes hit tanks, Taliban quarters
From Staff And Wire ReportsWASHINGTON - U.S. warplanes pounded the center of the Afghan capital of Kabul yesterday, striking a Taliban tank unit and other military installations, while the Taliban headquarters in Kandahar was hit dozens of times. As the U.S.-led aerial assault...Tags: Air and Space Accidents, New York, Wars and Interventions, Crime, Law and Justice, Entertainment
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FBI's use of bloodhounds in anthrax probe disputed
Sun StaffThree keen-nosed bloodhounds named Lucy, Knight and TinkerBelle, flown in by the FBI from Southern California late last summer to help with the anthrax investigation, are a major reason for agents' focus on former Army bioterrorism expert Dr. Steven J....Tags: U.S. Army, University of Georgia, Montgomery (Montgomery, Alabama), Crime, Law and Justice, Guerrilla Activity
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Iraqi groups agree to help form assembly
From Wire ReportsBAGHDAD, Iraq -- The main Iraqi opposition groups have agreed to help put together a national assembly of more than 350 deputies that would meet this month to name an interim executive council or prime minister to run the country. Representatives of...Tags: Colleges and Universities, Science and Technology, Missouri, Customs and Tradition, Saddam Hussein
Dec 20, 2001
|Story| Hartford Courant
Aug 13, 2002
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Sep 27, 2002
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Aug 25, 2002
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Sep 4, 2002
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Oct 26, 2001
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Dec 7, 2001
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Oct 15, 2001
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Nov 2, 2001
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Oct 19, 2001
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Oct 29, 2002
|Story| Baltimore Sun
May 6, 2003
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Original site for Bioterrorism topic gallery.