BREAKING: Suspect of Obama Poisoned Letters, Kenneth Curtis, Has Been Arrested - Mississippi
NBC. Federal agents on Wednesday arrested a suspect in the mailing of
letters to President Barack Obama and a U.S. senator that initially
tested positive for the poison ricin.
The suspect was identified as Kenneth Curtis of Tupelo, Miss., federal officials told NBC News.
Both letters carried an identical closing statement, according to an FBI bulletin obtained by NBC News on Wednesday.
According
to the FBI bulletin, both letters, postmarked April 8, 2013 out of
Memphis, Tenn., included an identical phrase, "to see a wrong and not
expose it, is to become a silent partner to its continuance."
In addition, both letters are signed: "I am KC and I approve this message."
The
letter to Obama was intercepted at an off-site White House mail
facility and was being tested further, the FBI said. A federal law
enforcement official said that the letter was "very similar" to one
addressed to Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss.
Two federal officials said
late Wednesday that an initial laboratory test on the material in the
letters was inconclusive. The test shows some level of ricin, they said,
but the potency is uncertain. They cannot tell whether the material is
actually harmful or not. So more tests have been ordered.
The
sender of the letters, one official said, "may have stumbled onto
something," but it's unknown if he actually made full-blown ricin toxin.
Ricin
is made from castor beans and can kill within 36 hours. There is no
antidote. Some threatening letters simply contain ground castor beans,
resulting in a positive field test for ricin without the concentrated
poison. Results from full laboratory tests are expected in the next 24
to 48 hours.
Filters at a second government mail screening facility also tested positive for ricin in preliminary screening Wednesday.
An
FBI official told NBC News that the agency did not initially believe
the letters were related to the attack on the Boston Marathon on Monday.
Authorities
also for a time cleared the atrium of a Senate office building
Wednesday, removing suspicious envelopes and a package, before reopening
the offices. Capitol police were also investigating a suspicious
package at the office of Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala. Shelby's staff had
not been evacuated.
The Wicker letter had no return address. The FBI
confirmed the preliminary positive test on it Tuesday. That letter was
intercepted at a postal facility in Maryland that screens mail sent to
Congress, and never reached Wicker's office.
Other senators were made
aware of the Wicker letter during a briefing Tuesday evening on the
bombing in Boston. Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., said that the person
who sent Wicker the letter writes often to elected officials.
People
can be exposed to ricin by touching a ricin-laced letter or by inhaling
particles that enter the air when the envelope is opened. Touching ricin
can cause a rash but is not usually fatal. Inhaling it can cause
trouble breathing, fever and other symptoms, and can be fatal.
At a
hearing Wednesday on the Postal Service's finances, Postmaster General
Patrick Donahoe said that while there have been ricin scares in the
past, the recent discoveries were unprecedented.
"There's never been
any actually proved that have gone through the system," Donahoe said.
"But we've got a process that we make sure that our employees know -- We
can actually track the mail back through the system to double check
from an employee health standpoint."
Field tests are conducted
anytime suspicious powder is found in a mail facility, and the FBI
cautioned that field tests and other preliminary tests can produce
inconsistent results. When tests show the possibility of a biological
agent, the material is sent to a laboratory for full analysis.
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