Posted on 10/19/2001 10:14:55 AM PDT by callisto
The woman served 250 to 300 addresses in Ewing Township, mostly homes, but also some apartment buildings and a few businesses, fellow letter carrier Jim Bittenbender said.
The woman, whom authorities have not identified, does not pick up mail from public boxes, he said, indicating any outgoing mail she received would likely have come from those addresses or from someone personally.
"That would obviously be among the many avenues we would pursue," said Sandra Carroll, an FBI spokeswoman in Newark.
Bittenbender said his colleague didn't remember handling anything unusual.
"We pick up thousands of letters from this office. One letter carrier may pick up hundreds. It's something you just don't remember," he said Friday.
He and the infected woman work at the small West Trenton post office in Ewing, one of 46 central New Jersey stations that feed into a regional distribution facility in Hamilton.
A male worker who serviced mail-sorting machines at the Hamilton office was also being tested for exposure. Results were expected Friday. Postal Inspector Tony Esposito said officials were "almost certain" he has anthrax.
Authorities confirmed the woman's skin anthrax diagnosis on Thursday.
The two workers were being treated by personal physicians and taking antibiotics, officials said. The female employee had also been treated at a local hospital and released, health officials said.
"Both are doing well," Acting Gov. Donald DiFrancesco said.
A third postal employee - a Levittown, Pa., man who sorts and loads mail at the regional center - developed a skin rash and was tested for anthrax exposure or infection.
Bucks County Health Commissioner Dr. Louis Polk said the 35-year-old man was being treated for a skin rash at a hospital. His test results were also expected Friday.
A Sept. 18 letter tainted with anthrax was postmarked from Trenton and mailed to Brokaw. Another contaminated letter from Trenton, mailed to Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle in Washington, was postmarked Oct. 9, after the woman was infected.
Bar codes on one of the tainted letters from Trenton indicated that the infected woman probably handled the envelope, sources said. Earlier this week, officials said the letter carrier and maintenance worker were working on days when the tainted mail would have been processed.
Postal officials examined the prestamped envelopes and video surveillance tapes for clues as to the source of the letters.
Parts of the Hamilton office were sealed Thursday, and it and the West Trenton facility were closed to the public Friday. Officials said first-class mail, which is machine sorted, would be delivered out of the West Trenton office.
Officials with the federal Centers for Disease Control were in New Jersey on Friday to decide whether to give more tests to other postal employees.
Carroll also said Friday that the FBI is going to test items removed last month from the apartment of two Jersey City detainees for anthrax after The Wall Street Journal reported that the vacant apartment currently contains articles about bioterrorism.
The newspaper reported on Thursday that the unlocked apartment of Mohammed Jaweed Azmath and Ayub Ali Khan contained a 1995 article on sarin nerve gas and a magazine article on the National Center for Infectious Diseases. Azmath and Khan have been detained since they were picked up in Texas on an Amtrak train the day after the Sept. 11 terrorism, carrying about $5,000 and box-cutting knives similar to those used by the hijackers.
Carroll said the FBI has not returned to that apartment since a search Sept. 15 and has no immediate reason to suspect a connection between the detainees and bioterrorism.
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On the Net:
Postal Service:
AP-ES-10-19-01 1233EDT
</FONWould be interesting to know how serving 250 to 300 addresses compares in terms of efficiency to FedEx Ground or UPS.
HAH! It was reporters for the Wall Street Journal, NOT the FBI, who somehow gained access to this apartment recently and found the articles on bioterrorism -- apparently OVERLOOKED by the FBI.
Not only that, but one of the residents of that apartment, Mohammed Pervez, had recently lived and worked in Trenton:
Suspects had bioterror articles [one named Pervez lived, worked in Trenton]
The article clearly states that the woman NEVER picks up mail from public boxes. Perhaps it isn't the FBI that's a waste of time, but your posts instead?
I bet they catch this clown PDQ, unless he's skipped town already.
EwingTwp is sprawling (about 30K pop... and right outside of Trenton...
I just emailed some people I know in Ewing Twp to tell me if they've seen FBI activity in their neighborhood.
I'm sure the creeps have skipped town however, but it could give us a "clue" to who they were......
It's also the home of the COLLEGE of NEW JERSEY
I was thinking the same thing. For once, the inefficiency of the postal service may work in our favor.
Like the guy from the WTC bombing years ago who went to the truck rental agency to get his deposit back. What an ultra maroon (bugs bunny)!
? I respectfully and strongly disagree. Where are they to look? A letter carrier's route in Northwestern Idaho? They would be supremely foolish if they didn't check this route out. No guarantee of finding a clue, but you're guaranteed not to find a clue if you don't investigate this obvious lead.
Well, knowing the past stupidity of the first WTC bombers of trying to get a deposit back for a missing truck! its worth a shot.
Am I the only person on here who thinks the FBI is a waste of resources at working at nothing but diversion?
Apparently you are, What would you want them to do? Throw their arms up in the air and say, "We have no idea."? Give them a break, of course they want to catch these people and they are going to cover every clue at their disposal.
Israelis Capture Man With Radiological Backpack Bomb 10-19-1
ISRAEL - Israeli security last month arrested a man linked to suspected terrorist coordinator, Osama bin Laden, armed with a radiological backpack bomb.
The man was arrested in the last week of September as he attempted to enter Israel from the Palestinian Territories at a border crossing point at Ramallah, according to U.S. government officials.
"There was only one individual involved. He was from Pakistan," a government official said.
An official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, declined to give the exact date of arrest. Two other sources interviewed by United Press International confirmed the incident, but also declined to give further details.
"People know how to walk a dog back," one said, meaning that relating too exact an account could lead to the identification of the source of the information.
Another source said U.S. officials believed that the suspect had probably reached the territories by way of Lebanon.
Information on the arrest went immediately to President Bush and a close circle of advisers, another U.S. official said. He described the appearance and character of the top-secret report circulated among the Cabinet members and signed by each official present.
Former Pentagon terrorism expert Peter Probst described a radiological bomb as a device with a small explosive core that is encased in radioactive material. "It would not kill a great many people, but it would contaminate a considerable area with radiation," he said.
A U.S. government expert said that the weapon captured by Israel was a backpack device that CIA officials learned about through Russian intelligence agents in place in 1995. He emphasized it was not a so-called nuclear suitcase bomb.
Backpack bombs were designed for Russian Spetznaz special forces and have such an intricate and complex system of activation that the ability of a terrorist to detonate one would be incredibly limited, according to one U.S. government official.
"There is such a complicated sequence you have to perform that some terrorist isn't going to be able to get it to work. You have to be very highly trained," an intelligence official agreed, describing the chances that the device could have been activated as "practically miniscule."
Probst is nevertheless convinced that radiological bombs are still a danger for New York City. "Bin Laden is fascinated by Wall Street. My fear is that he will attempt to smuggle in some "dirty" bomb that wouldn't kill many people but would dangerously contaminate the area," he said.
Maybe not. They may have been wearing gas masks and rubber gloves when handling this stuff. They're not likely to walk down to the local post drop box in that getup.
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