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Investigators on Wednesday unsealed the final search warrants executed against the man they say is responsible for the 2001 anthrax-by-mail attacks, disclosing that Bruce Ivins sent an e-mail to himself last year claiming that he had solved the notorious case. ...more
September 25, 2008
The chairman of the of Senate Judiciary Committee said Wednesday that he does not believe Bruce Ivins acted alone in the deadly 2001 anthrax attacks. ...more
September 18, 2008
FBI scientists early on had - but destroyed - the unique strain of anthrax used in the deadly 2001 attacks that years later would lead them to Bruce Ivins, the government's top suspect in the nation's biggest bioterror case. ...more
August 19, 2008
Revelations about anthrax scientist Bruce Ivins' mental instability have exposed what congressional leaders and security experts call startling gaps in how the federal government safeguards its most dangerous biological materials, even as the number of bioscience laboratories has grown rapidly since the 2001 terror attacks. ...more
August 8, 2008
Victims of the deadly 2001 anthrax attacks said Thursday that they are satisfied with the investigation's outcome that pinned the blame on an Army scientist. And now, the widow of a dead photo editor said, it's time for the government to settle her lawsuit and pay up. ...more
August 8, 2008
Lacking hard proof, federal prosecutors relied on the process of elimination and circumstantial evidence to finger Bruce Ivins as the anthrax killer. ...more
August 7, 2008
More than a year before the anthrax attacks that killed five people in 2001, Bruce Ivins told a counselor he was interested in a young woman who lived out of town and had "mixed poison" and taken it with him when he went to watch her play in a soccer match. ...more
August 7, 2008
Details are emerging from the alleged anthrax killer investigation that leaves most regular folks wondering how in the world someone with the deceased suspect's mental health problems continue to work in such a sensitive field? ...more
August 6, 2008
In the face of growing questions about the strength of the evidence, the Justice Department is preparing to declare the 2001 anthrax case solved and to make its case publicly today against a military scientist who killed himself after investigators linked him to the attacks, federal law enforcement officials said Tuesday. ...more
August 6, 2008
Bruce E. Ivins, the government's leading suspect in the 2001 anthrax killings, borrowed freeze-drying equipment from a bioweapons lab that fall that allows scientists to convert wet germ cultures into dry spores, according to sources briefed on the case. ...more
August 5, 2008
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