Suspicious Powder at Senate Building - RICIN!
Posted: Mon Feb 02, 2004 8:29 pm
Hazardous Substance
Suspicious Powder Empties Some Offices at Senate Building
Feb. 2— Some workers in a Senate office building were told to leave their offices today after preliminary testing indicated the presence of a hazardous substance. The U.S. Capitol Police said a suspicious powder substance was found at 3 p.m. in a room in the Dirksen Senate Office Building, located northeast of the Capitol. A preliminary test found that the substance was hazardous, the police said.
Around 7:20 p.m. a message on the Senate's internal telephone alert system instructed employees in several offices on the south side of the building's fourth floor to report to a large conference room. Other employees were warned to stay away from the south side of the fourth floor. Emergency workers cordoned off the affected area with police "hazardous" tape and set up a decontamination tent.
A senior government source told ABCNEWS the Capitol Police conducted two field tests on the substance, one of which identified it as ricin, a potentially deadly poison derived from castor beans.
The other field test was negative, the official said, adding that the Capitol Police were sending the substance to Fort Detrick in Maryland — home to the the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, where the military conducts biological warfare research — for further testing.
Source
Suspicious Powder Empties Some Offices at Senate Building
Feb. 2— Some workers in a Senate office building were told to leave their offices today after preliminary testing indicated the presence of a hazardous substance. The U.S. Capitol Police said a suspicious powder substance was found at 3 p.m. in a room in the Dirksen Senate Office Building, located northeast of the Capitol. A preliminary test found that the substance was hazardous, the police said.
Around 7:20 p.m. a message on the Senate's internal telephone alert system instructed employees in several offices on the south side of the building's fourth floor to report to a large conference room. Other employees were warned to stay away from the south side of the fourth floor. Emergency workers cordoned off the affected area with police "hazardous" tape and set up a decontamination tent.
A senior government source told ABCNEWS the Capitol Police conducted two field tests on the substance, one of which identified it as ricin, a potentially deadly poison derived from castor beans.
The other field test was negative, the official said, adding that the Capitol Police were sending the substance to Fort Detrick in Maryland — home to the the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, where the military conducts biological warfare research — for further testing.
Source