Your story breaks down. Yes, no letter was found. After that, what was found in various post offices is of less importance (in regard to the Florida attack) because the anthrax could have been delivered via non-postal means such as on tainted cash.
"The letter was addressed to an obsolete address for The National Enquirer in Lantana, Florida. It was then forwarded from Lantana to the AMI offices in Boca Raton. It was opened by Stephanie Dailey, whose job was to open letters for The National Enquirer. She's the only person besides Stevens and Blanco who tested positive for anthrax exposure." - edlake
Nope. No letter was found, so you can't pretend to state it's address. Also, an "obsolete address" would have required a Florida letter to be mailed even before September 8.
You've essentially missed every important detail of this entire case.
Friday evening ~ at Boca Raton. Next day, the rest of the letters would need only to be dropped in street collection boxes to end up "lost in the mail".
That's FUNNY! I guess it proves you can dream up any absurd story you want, and no one can prove you wrong.
But the FACTS say that the letter was most likely postmarked on September 18, just like the other media letters. It went by truck to Atlanta and then to West Palm Beach where equipment tested positive for anthrax. Other post offices tested positive due to cross-contamination: Green Acres, Blue Lake, Lake Worth and the Boca Raton main substation. Other post offices in the area were NOT contaminated. The pattern shows that the letter was most likely addressed to The National Enquirer's old address at Lantana.
The letter most likely arrived at AMI in Boca Raton on Friday, September 21, Saturday September 22 or Monday September 24. Stephanie Dailey remembers opening a letter containing a powder on or around Tuesday, September 25, when she returned from vacation. It was her job to open letter addressed to The National Enquirer. She would NOT have opened any letter addressed to the Sun.
She was on vacation when the J-Lo letter arrived and was opened and passed around, so she couldn't possibly have been contaminated by that letter. The pattern of spores in the AMI building show that the J-Lo letter couldn't have contained anthrax.
This is what the FACTS say, but obviously you are just going to believe whatever you want to believe because you know there's no way to prove you wrong.
Ed