Thursday,
October 18, 2001
Anthrax
exposure at Capitol sparks shutdown
By David Espo
Associated press
WASHINGTON
Congressional leaders ordered an unprecedented shutdown
of the House on Wednesday after more than two dozen people
in Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschles office tested
positive for exposure to a highly concentrated form of anthrax.
We
will not let this stop the work of the Senate, Daschle
said at a news conference outside the Capitol. He said 31
people have had positive nasal swabs, including
two Capitol police officers. Despite the vow to remain open,
officials said all three of the Senates office buildings
would be shut down Thursday and Friday for testing.
Daschle
made his announcement a short while after Speaker Dennis Hastert
said that anthrax had been found in the Senates mailroom.
To
ensure safety we thought it best to do a complete sweep, an
environmental sweep, he said, adding that House members
and staff would be sent home at days end, until at least
Tuesday.
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Chuck
Kennedy/KRT Campus
Capitol Hill staffers wait in line to be tested for
anthrax exposure in the Hart Senate Office Building
Wednesday.
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Three
government officials said Wednesday there was no evidence
of any foreign or terrorist involvement although they continue
to investigate the possibility. One official said there was
evidence that could point toward a domestic culprit.
On a
day of rapidly unfolding events, Hastert also told reporters
that a suspicious package had been removed from his suite
of staff offices on the fourth floor of the Capitol and was
being tested for anthrax.
In addition,
Sen. Russell Feingold, D-Wis., announced that two of his aides
had tested positive for exposure to anthrax. Feingolds
office is adjacent to Daschles suite in the Hart Senate
Office Building. It was not known whether the aides had entered
Daschles suite.
Five
weeks after terrorist strikes killed thousands in New York
and Washington, there was cause for bioterrorism concern elsewhere
around the country. In New York, Gov. George Pataki announced
that a test conducted in his midtown Manhattan office showed
the presence of anthrax. Officials said the suite of offices
had been closed for further testing and decontamination.
Pataki
said one test did indicate the probability of anthrax,
adding that the odds are very high that subsequent
testing will confirm the presence of anthrax.
Outside
of Washington, four people are known to have contracted anthrax
and nine others have tested positive for the bacteria.
With
word of the positive test results on Capitol Hill, officials
opened a second anthrax testing center in the physicians
office on the first floor of the Capitol. A line extended
up to the second floor. Tests also were available in an office
building across the street. There, more than 1,000 people
were tested on Tuesday and given a three-day supply of antibiotics
as a precaution.
At his
news conference, Hastert told reporters that his staff offices
on the fourth floor of the Capitol had been placed under quarantine.
Hastert spokesman John Feehery said the step was taken after
an aide to the speaker recalled seeing a letter that bore
lettering similar to what was on the letter sent to Daschle
and a second anthrax-tainted letter addressed to NBC anchor
Tom Brokaw.
Hastert
also told reporters that anthrax had gotten into the
ventilation system in Senate portion of the Capitol
complex. But a short while later, Scott Lillibridge, a bioterrorism
expert at the Department of Health and Human Services, said
the only known evidence of anthrax was found in Daschles
office across the street from the Capitol and in the Senates
mailroom in a second office building.
There
is absolutely no evidence of infection at this point,
Daschle said. All of those who had had this positive
nasal swab have been on antibiotics for some time and the
good news is that everyone is OK.
Daschle,
flanked by Senate Republican Leader Trent Lott, sought to
ease concerns that had been raised by word of the positive
test results and by Hasterts announcement that House
members and staff would be sent home at days end to
allow for environmental testing.
There
will be a vote this afternoon, Daschle said. We
will be in session and have a vote or votes tomorrow.
Senate
leaders were accompanied by numerous federal officials, several
of whom stepped before the microphone to announce developments
in the most reassuring manner possible.
This
particular strain of anthrax is sensitive to all antibiotics,
said Maj. Gen. John Parker, speaking on behalf of the Ft.
Detrick military lab technicians in Maryland who performed
the tests on the samples.
He described
it as common variety anthrax.
While
some of the anthrax-laced powder was refined in a way to make
it airborne, preliminary tests suggest the strain was common
to the United States, a government official said. The official
added the letters sent to Brokaw and Daschle urged the use
of medicine and alerted the recipients to the presence of
the poison something deemed unlikely for a terrorist
seeking mass casualties.
In an
atmosphere of some confusion, finger-pointing broke out between
members of the House and Senate. Some senators openly questioned
Hasterts announcement of a shutdown. But at his second
news conference of the day, Hastert said there had been an
agreement between the two houses that we would close
our offices this evening.
He said
the Senate would conduct only a pro forma session on Friday,
and its offices would be closed as well.
A positive
finding does not mean the person has the disease or will get
the disease. About 8,000 spores must be inhaled for a person
to develop inhalation anthrax.
Health
and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson, testifying on
Capitol Hill, said, Theres no question this is
a very serious attempt at anthrax poisoning.
Lillibridge
added: Theres been some attempt to collect it,
perhaps refine it and perhaps make it more concentrated. That
seems certain.
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