Source: www.nationalterroralert.com
In the 7½ years since America’s worst bioterror attack — when letters laced with anthrax spores killed five people, closed Congress and the Supreme Court and crippled mail service for months — U.S. agencies have spent more than $50 billion to beef up biological defenses.
No other anthrax attacks have occurred. But a flood of hoaxes and false alarms have raised the cost considerably through lost work, evacuations, decontamination efforts, first responders’ time and the emotional distress of the victims. That, experts say, is often the hoaxsters’ goal.
“It’s easy, it’s cheap and very few perpetrators get caught,” said Leonard Cole, a political scientist at Rutgers University in Newark, N.J., who studies bioterrorism. “People do it for a sense of power.”
Among the recent targets:
• Nearly all 50 governors’ offices
• About 100 U.S. embassies
• 52 banks
• 36 news organizations
• Ticket booths at Disneyland
• Mormon temples in Salt Lake City and Los Angeles
• Town halls in Batavia, Ohio, and Ellenville, N.Y.
• A funeral home and a day-care center in Ocala, Fla.
• A sheriff’s office in Eagle, Colo.
• Homes in Ely River, N.M.
The FBI has investigated about 1,000 such “white-powder events” as possible terrorist threats since the start of 2007, spokesman Richard Kolko said. The bureau responds if a letter contains a written threat or is mailed to a federal official.
Advice on what your organization can be preparing to do for such an eventuality can be found at:
www.hse.gov.uk/biosafety/diseases/anthrax.htm