McCain HQ in anthrax scare after 'mystery white powder' arrives in a threatening letter - News - Evening Standard
       

McCain HQ in anthrax scare after 'mystery white powder' arrives in a threatening letter

Anthrax scare: John McCain

Two offices of John McCain's U.S. presidential campaign were evacuated yesterday  after a threatening letter arrived containing an unidentified white powder - sparking an anthrax alert.

The first parcel was opened by a staff member at the campaign's Centennial, Colorado, office, near Denver.

Four members of Mr McCain's staff admitted themselves to a nearby hospital, and seven other staff members and four emergency personnel were quarantined as a precaution.

None of the four individuals admitted to the Sky Ridge Medical Center near Denver showed any signs of illness, hospital spokesman Linda Watson told Reuters. Nor did any of the 11 quarantined, the Secret Service said.

Watson said the powdery substance was being examined by the Colorado Department of Public Health and results were expected later yesterday.

Within hours, the letter was traced by authorities to a Colorado jail inmate who has a history of sending threatening mail.

The New Hampshire scare over a second envelope there was later deemed to be an unrelated incident brought about by anxiety over the threatening letter received in Colorado.

McCain, 71, a Republican senator from Arizona and his party's presumed nominee for president, was taking the day off from the campaign, spending the day at his home in Sedona, Arizona.

Mystery powder: A decontamination team head into the Denver office used as campaign HQ by John McCain

Mystery powder: A decontamination team head into the Denver office used as campaign HQ by John McCain

Jeff Sadosky, a campaign spokesman in suburban Washington, D.C., said both the Colorado office, which serves as the campaign's south central regional headquarters, and the Manchester, New Hampshire, office, were evacuated immediately.

He and Wiley said the envelope of concern in New Hampshire was initially deemed suspicious because it bore a Denver return address.

Wiley later said the Colorado envelope was determined to have been mailed by an inmate of a local county jail who has sent threatening letters in the past. The New Hampshire scare proved to be unrelated and brought about by anxious staffers.

The Democratic National Convention is due to open in Denver on Monday.

The postal scare comes weeks after a U.S. Army scientist committed suicide as federal prosecutors were preparing to indict him in connection with the 2001 anthrax mailings that killed five people in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks on Washington and New York.

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