WASHINGTON -- A State Department mail handler lay ill with inhalation anthrax Thursday and the besieged Postal Service set up spot checks at facilities nationwide as the bioterror scare widened. "We still don't know who is responsible," said Homeland Security Director Tom Ridge.
At a White House news conference, Ridge also disclosed that the anthrax contained in mail addressed to Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle had been altered to make it more of a threat. "It is highly concentrated. It is pure and the spores are smaller," he said. "Therefore they're more dangerous because they can be more easily absorbed in a person's respiratory system."
Ridge identified the strain of anthrax used in the U.S. attacks as Ames, a substance named for the university city in Iowa, and used in American bioweapons research and in vaccine testing.
Three weeks into the nation's unprecedented bioterrorism scare, lawmakers were permitted to return to several of their office buildings on Capitol Hill. And White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said there had been no evidence of anthrax exposure among officials there who came in contact with mail that went through an offsite machine where anthrax was detected earlier in the week.
"We are here to conduct the nation's business. We will not be frightened," said Secretary of State Colin Powell as he appeared before a Senate committee.
But there were words of caution elsewhere. "We are very concerned about additional letters. We would be naive to think this is over yet," said Dr. Julie Gerberding of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
There was further jolting news, a disclosure from officials in New Jersey that a postal worker was being watched for suspected inhalation anthrax, the discovery of two more areas of contamination in a still-closed Senate office building -- and then the announcement from the State Department.
Spokesman Richard Boucher said a department employee who works at a mail handling site in Sterling, Va., had become the nation's latest victim of a disease last seen more than two decades ago.
Dr. Ivan Walks, head of Washington's public health department, said the 59-year-old man was hospitalized in guarded condition with inhalation anthrax. Unlike other area residents who have been hit, this patient had been asked whether his job required him to go to the Brentwood postal facility that serves as the main mail processing center for the nation's capital. "His answer was 'never,"' Walks reported.
A second man who works at the same mail facility as the infected worker has flu-like symptoms and is being tested at a hospital, Boucher said Thursday night.
Mail to federal agencies passes through the Brentwood facility, and the latest diagnosis added to the mounting evidence that investigators have not yet found all the anthrax-tainted mail in the area's postal system. Postal Service Vice President Deborah Willhite said the agency would begin testing all government mail intake facilities in the region for signs of anthrax.
In addition, the State Department announced it would test employees at all of its mail annexes and its main facility several blocks from the White House. In all, he said 250 to 300 people are being tested for anthrax exposure, and about 80 people who work at the Sterling facility are receiving the antibiotic Cipro, Boucher said.
"We don't know where it's coming from," Boucher said of the anthrax.
The announcement brought the number of confirmed anthrax cases to 13 in the past three weeks, including seven cases of inhalation and six of the less dangerous skin form of the disease. Most are linked to anthrax-spiked mail that has passed through New Jersey, New York or the nation's capital.
One such letter was addressed to Daschle; others were sent to NBC News anchorman Tom Brokaw and to the New York Post. Anthrax has also been found in Florida, where one man died, although authorities have not yet found tainted mail there.
At his White House news conference, Ridge said tests on the anthrax found to date confirmed it is all of the same strain and responds to antibiotics, meaning that "people who are exposed can be treated."
At the same time, he added, the substance in Daschle's mail "has some different characteristics" that make it more easily taken into a victim's lungs. He said that based on the latest lab reports, "it is clear that the terrorists responsible for these attacks intended to use this anthrax as a weapon."
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