April 16, 2013 --
Washington (CNN) -- An envelope that tested positive for the deadly poison ricin was intercepted Tuesday afternoon at the U.S. Capitol's off-site mail facility in Washington, congressional and law enforcement sources tell CNN.
Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid said he was told the letter was addressed to the office of
Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Mississippi. After the envelope tested positive in a
first routine test, it was retested two more times, each time coming up
positive, the law enforcement source said. The package was then sent to
a Maryland lab for further testing.
Sen. Claire McCaskill
told reporters after a briefing for lawmakers that a suspect has already
been identified in the incident. Members will be warning their
home-state offices to look out for similar letters, she said.
Wicker, the junior senator from Mississippi, has been assigned a protective detail, according to a law enforcement source.
Postal workers started
handling mail at a site off Capitol Hill after the 2001 anthrax attacks
that targeted then-Majority Leader Tom Daschle and Vermont Sen. Patrick
Leahy, among others. Senators were told those offices would be
temporarily shut down "to make sure they get everything squared away,"
McCaskill, D-Missouri, said Tuesday afternoon.
"The bottom line is, the process we have in place worked," she said.
A previous ricin scare
hit the Capitol in 2004, when tests identified a letter in a Senate
mailroom that served then-Majority Leader Bill Frist's office. The
discovery forced 16 employees to go through decontamination procedures,
but no one reported any ill effects afterward, Frist said.
Ricin is a highly toxic
substance derived from castor beans. As little as 500 micrograms -- an
amount the size of the head of a pin -- can kill an adult. There is no
specific test for exposure and no antidote once exposed.
It can be produced easily
and cheaply, and authorities in several countries have investigated
links between suspect extremists and ricin. But experts say it is more
effective on individuals than as a weapon of mass destruction.
Ricin was used in the
1978 assassination of Bulgarian dissident Georgi Markov. The author, who
had defected nine years earlier, was jabbed by the tip of an umbrella
while waiting for a bus in London and died four days later.
Wicker, 61, was first
appointed by former Republican Gov. Haley Barbour to the U.S. Senate in
December 2007 after the resignation of then-Sen. Trent Lott. He was then
elected to the seat in 2008 and won re-election in 2012 to a second
term.
Before joining the
Senate, he held elected office as a U.S. representative in the House
from 1995 to 2007. Before that, he served in the Mississippi Senate.
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