The Anthrax Mystery by Justin Raimondo
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Days before the anthrax story broke, but after the poisoned missives had been mailed, a very strange letter arrived at military police headquarters in Quantico, Virginia, accusing Dr. Ayaad Assaad, who formerly worked at Ft. Detrick's bio-warfare lab, of planning a terrorist attack. The author of the letter, clearly possessed of a detailed knowledge of Dr. Assaad's career and routine at USAMRIID, claimed to have once worked with the Egyptian-born scientist.
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Shortly after the anthrax letters were opened by the first unlucky recipients, the FBI paid a visit to Dr. Assaad, who was quickly cleared of any connection with the attacks. But his fascinating story – of his harassment by a cabal of viciously anti-Arab scientists at Ft. Detrick, who called themselves the "Camel Club" – provided law enforcement with the first significant clues. Now, three years later – after targeting the unlucky Steven J. Hatfill, publicly branding him as a "person of interest," and making his life a living hell – they are finally following up and seem to be hot on the trail of the anthrax killer(s).
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"Federal agents summoned the EPA scientist to their Washington field office last week and asked whether he wrote an anonymous letter to the FBI days before the first anthrax death, warning that another EPA researcher was a potential bio-terrorist. The scientist told federal investigators Wednesday that he had nothing to do with the anonymous letter, but the document indicated that he might be subjected to a lie-detector test."
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And there's my limit for paragraphs. The rest is at
http://www.antiwar.com/justin/It was pretty clear to me at the time that the anthrax terrorists were someone trying to look really hard like an islamic fundamentalist. Who clearly probably was a domestic terrorist.
Let us not forget this as well.