By Tom Shoop | Friday, August 08, 2008 | 03:07 PM
So if Army scientist Bruce Ivins had a history of mental problems and access to anthrax, why did it take so long for him to become a suspect in the anthrax killings of 2001?
The New York Times provides at least a partial answer today: Because at the beginning of the investigation, Ivins was nothing but helpful to FBI investigators working the case. He even served as a Red Cross volunteer when the FBI searched a pond near Frederick, Md., in 2002 for clues related to Stephen Hatfill, who was then the leading suspect in the case. Ivins served coffee, doughnuts and chocolate bars to agents before they realized where he worked and told him to leave before he compromised the investigation.
Comments
Perhaps the FBI needed a body and his body would do just as well as any other, providing an opportunity to declare both "case closed" and "no consipiracy". Lets hope that Congress steps up to look at the FBI handling of the entire case, the tactics of intimidation, bribery and intense pressure to come up with any suspect that they could pin the thing on.
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Government Executive Editor Tom Shoop takes a look at news and events affecting the federal bureaucracy, from the perspective of a longtime observer of government.
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