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To: B-bone
That it was a regular drop-off mailbox is even more frightening.

FYI, Nassau Street is the main drag in Princeton.

Anthrax Spores Found in Princeton Mailbox

NEWARK, NJ: August 12, 2002Anthrax spores were found inside a Princeton mailbox tested after workers at a regional mail sorting facility contracted the bacteria in October, Gov. James E. McGreevey said.

The mailbox was removed last week and there is no danger to the public, McGreevey said Monday. He spoke at a press conference with the state attorney general, David Samson, and Louie Allen, special agent in charge of the FBI's Newark office.

"No new cases have been detected beyond the original cases in October 2001," McGreevey said. "With the subsequent removal of the mailbox, no further threat exists."

McGreevey said he did not know when the tests were done. Michael Drewniak, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office, declined to say.

The mailbox is a standard blue public drop-box that was located on Nassau Street near Princeton University.

Its mail was fed through the sorting facility in Hamilton Township, and was among 600 chosen to be swabbed for anthrax spores by the U.S. attorney's office in Newark, McGreevey said. He did not know how or why the mailboxes were chosen.

Thirty-nine of the 600 mailboxes have yet to be tested.

U.S. Attorney Chris Christie issued a statement confirming the governor's announcement. He said the matter was under investigation.

Drewniak declined to say what effect the positive test might have on the investigation.

Dr. Clifton Lacy, commissioner of the state Department of Health and Senior Services, said the test results came back positive Thursday at the department's Public Health and Environmental Laboratory.

"It was not a field test," he said. "It was a sample done in the laboratory."

Lacy said a department survey of 240,000 emergency room visits and 7,100 stays in intensive care units in and around the state following the October infections turned up no new anthrax cases.

Hamilton handles mail for 46 area post offices and has been closed since Oct. 18. The office processed anthrax-tainted letters sent to NBC anchor Tom Brokaw, U.S. Sens. Tom Daschle and Patrick Leahy and the New York Post.

Copyright 2002 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

Last Updated: Aug 12, 2002

13 posted on 08/12/2002 8:17:43 PM PDT by Catspaw
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To: Catspaw; Fred Mertz
You're right. Nassau St. is the main drag in Princeton. I find it hard to believe the public mailboxes on this street were not tested after the news last year. Maybe it's just that we're only being told about this discovery now.
17 posted on 08/12/2002 8:21:59 PM PDT by aristeides
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To: Catspaw; Fred Mertz; kattracks; aristeides
NEWARK, NJ: August 12, 2002 — Anthrax spores were found inside a Princeton mailbox tested after workers at a regional mail sorting facility contracted the bacteria in October, Gov. James E. McGreevey said.

The mailbox was removed last week and there is no danger to the public, McGreevey said Monday. He spoke at a press conference with the state attorney general, David Samson, and Louie Allen, special agent in charge of the FBI's Newark office.

splain me this: if the contaminated mailbox was tested positive for anthrax resulting in postal workers contracting the bacteria in Oct '01...and was "removed last week"...why hasn't other the other mail posted through it over the past 9 months resulted in additional cases of anthrax?

49 posted on 08/13/2002 5:29:39 AM PDT by thinden
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