Sunday, February 22, 2009

Army Can't Account For Missing Anthrax

Please see: The Anthrax Attacks and the AmeriKan MSM before reading the MSM lies.

Related: Bush Prepares Release of Bio-Weapons on American Public

Left it for Obama to use, 'eh?

HAGERSTOWN, Md. - The Army said yesterday it has suspended much of the research at its flagship biological weapons defense laboratory at Fort Detrick while it makes sure it has accounted for all of its dangerous germs and poisons.

See: Alan Cantwell, MD On The ManMade Origin Of AIDS

So when is the government releasing the bugs, MSM? Same drill as 9/11?

The decision follows a review of inventory controls prompted by the FBI's conclusion that Fort Detrick scientist Bruce E. Ivins was responsible for the anthrax mailings that killed five people and sickened 17 others in 2001. Ivins killed himself in July after learning he would be charged in the attacks. His attorney maintains he was innocent.

And the MSM shoveling that lie and failing to investigate bothers me -- and tells you everything you need to know about their lying and obfuscating asses!

In a memo obtained by the Associated Press, Colonel John P. Skvorak ordered workers to check all refrigerators and freezers at the US Army Research Institute of Infectious Diseases at Fort Detrick in Frederick, Md., for dangerous materials not listed in the lab's database. The memo, sent Wednesday, refers to "BSAT" materials, biological select agents and toxins.

"I believe that the probability that there are additional vials of BSAT not captured in our . . . database is high," Skvorak wrote.

How could they have MORE GERMS? Someone bringing them IN?

The suspension started Friday, and the tedious process of counting thousands of vials could take up to three months, institute spokeswoman Caree Vander Linden said.... Fort Detrick lab workers conduct research on the world's deadliest pathogens, including the Ebola virus. The strain of anthrax used in the 2001 attacks - RMR-1029 - was documented, but the FBI says Ivins kept a flask of it in a refrigerated storage room that only he used.

Michael Brady, special assistant to Army Secretary Pete Geren, said Skvorak's order reflects tightened security at Army biological research centers nationwide in the wake of Ivins's suicide. In December, an Army task force announced additional security training for workers at Fort Detrick and four other labs. "We have made it incredibly more difficult for another Bruce Ivins to happen," Brady said.

Then there BETTER NOT BE ANOTHER FALSE-FLAGGER, Mike!!!!!!

He said he didn't know whether the other Army labs also have suspended research while they check inventory. Brady said Skvorak's order is part of a cultural change at Fort Detrick, where, in the past, workers who found undocumented vials "might have just added it to the database or destroyed it without any notification at all."

I find that hard to believe, I really do! Handling the most dangerous stuff, and they had a little extra and said add it to the pile (or destroy it not knowing what it is/was)?

Skvorak's memo, first reported by the Internet blog ScienceInsider, attributed undocumented pathogens to accounting errors, transcription errors or materials left behind by former employees.

They must think if they put a whopper of a lie out it will go, over the top of us; this is absurd, readers. If this is "security" they need to STOP all this "research."

Some lab workers have complained that the Army is trying to impose on biological research an inventory-control scheme developed for nuclear and chemical labs. They argue that living material can be grown into a larger supply, making inventory reporting difficult.

Pffft! But they need to listen to emails and phone calls, huh?

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