Anthrax found at offsite White House mail facility
|
| "I
don't have anthrax," President Bush said Tuesday. |
| |
|
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- President Bush said Tuesday he is
"confident when I come to work tomorrow that I'll be safe," despite the
detection of anthrax at an offsite mail facility that screens White House
mail.
Asked by reporters whether he had been tested for anthrax and whether
he was taking antibiotics, Bush said only, "I don't have anthrax."
"Our government is responding very quickly. We're working hard to find
out who's doing this and bring them to justice. We're also working to
develop measures necessary to protect American citizens and postal
workers," he said.
Anthrax was found Tuesday on a device that opens mail at the Anacostia
Naval Station in Washington, where mail bound for the White House is
screened.
Environmental tests detected no anthrax within the executive mansion
itself, said White House press secretary Ari Fleischer.
Fleischer said security procedures at the White House provide "high
confidence that there is not an issue here."
Government sources told CNN that when mail is opened and checked at the
Anacostia facility, it is also irradiated to kill germs before going to
the White House mailroom, which is near the executive mansion but not in
the building.
Employees at the offsite mail facility are being tested for anthrax
exposure and are getting nasal swabs, Fleischer said. Antibiotics will be
made available to them, he said.
The facility has been closed for further testing and decontamination.
Fleischer said all mail at the facility is being checked to try to
determine the source of the anthrax.
According to the Secret Service, no one connected with the facility has
reported symptoms consistent with anthrax. The workers had previously been
provided with "protective equipment," the Secret Service said in a written
statement.
Mail destined for the White House has been screened at the offsite
facility for "a number of years," according to the Secret Service.
Mail travels there from the U.S. Postal Service's Brentwood sorting
station in Washington, the workplace of two postal employees who died from
inhalation anthrax and two others who are ill from it.
Because no letter or package with anthrax was discovered among the
White House mail, investigative sources told CNN they assume a small
amount of anthrax may have gotten on White House mail at the Brentwood
facility.
Asked about the positive test at the White House mail facility, Health
and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson said health officials would
perform an "aggressive environmental assessment" and provide antibiotics
to anyone believed to have been exposed.
When asked if he would recommend that Bush begin taking Cipro, an
antibiotic for anthrax, Thompson said, "If he's been exposed, yes. If not,
no."
The test that led to the positive result was part of "enhanced security
procedures" implemented in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks,
Fleischer said.
He said a "regular program" of environmental sampling at the White
House has turned up no positive tests for anthrax.
Asked if he believed the al Qaeda terrorist network, suspected in the
September 11 attacks, was behind the anthrax threat, Bush said he had no
"hard evidence."
But he said anyone who would send anthrax through the mail is a
"terrorist," and that "it wouldn't surprise me that they're involved with
this.
"It's hard for Americans to imagine how evil the people are who are
doing this," Bush said.
-- CNN Senior White House Correspondent John
King contributed to this report.
|