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9780060522797

The Killer Strain: Anthrax and a Government Exposed

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780060522797

  • ISBN10:

    0060522798

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2004-03-10
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publications

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Summary

The Killer Strain is the definitive account of the year in which bioterrorism became a reality in the United States, exposing failures in judgment and a flawed understanding of the anthrax bacteria's capacity to kill. With the pace and drama of fiction, this book goes behind the scenes to examine the confused, often bungled response by federal agencies to the anthrax attacks of 2001. It shows how the Bush administration's efforts to control information and downplay risk led to mistakes that ultimately cost two postal workers their lives.

Author Biography

Marilyn W. Thompson is currently Assistant Managing Editor for Investigations at the Washington Post.

Table of Contents

The Eclipse
In the Fieldp. 3
Red Sky at Morningp. 21
Black Clouds over Detrickp. 37
Enemies Among Usp. 51
Walking Woundedp. 61
The Attacks
The Index Casep. 71
Mountain Streams and Spinp. 85
Media Madnessp. 99
The Face of Satanp. 109
Neither Snow, Nor Rainp. 127
A Warning Ignoredp. 141
The Aftermath
Patterns and Puzzlesp. 153
Too Hot to Handlep. 165
Taking Stockp. 177
A Person of Interestp. 189
Resignation and Redemptionp. 207
Home Againp. 217
Notesp. 221
Acknowledgmentsp. 231
Indexp. 233
Table of Contents provided by Rittenhouse. All Rights Reserved.

Supplemental Materials

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Excerpts

The Killer Strain
Anthrax and a Government Exposed

Chapter One

In the Field

October 19, 2001
Stafford,Virginia

By the time Leroy Richmond awoke, the lethal spores had settled into his lungs, but of course he did not know it. He felt hot and achy, and wondered if he might be coming down with the flu. It was before dawn on Friday, a regular workday at the U.S. Postal Service, and Richmond did not indulge thoughts of staying home. His wife, Susan, often complained that he was married to the job -- a "worka-holic" -- but he looked forward to each day of handling express mail at the cavernous Brentwood Mail Processing and Distribution Center in Washington, D.C.

Richmond slowly rolled out of bed and washed and dressed as usual, trying to ignore the erratic fever he had been battling for several days. He would feel bad and then suddenly better, a phenomenon known in the medical literature as an "eclipse."He had been treating his symptoms with common aspirin, a laughable remedy given the virulent nature of the bacteria infecting him, like confronting an attacking tiger with a pellet gun. The aspirin made him feel better, but the relief was perilously deceptive. Microscopic rod-shaped germs arrayed in long, narrow chains incubated in the warm recesses of his chest, mustering for a stealthy assault. Within hours, they would send two toxins surging through Richmond's bloodstream,poisons that could render powerless the most potent treatments. His lungs would bleed and swell with germ-clouded liquid. The pressure would threaten his heart, and he would drift in and out of consciousness, breathing weakly through a respirator. Statistically, he had a slim chance of beating the pathogen unleashed inside his body.

The clock read 2:50 A.M. as Richmond tiptoed through the dark, past polished tables filled with photographs of family, some of whom were still sleeping in the rooms behind him. His wife kept their two-story house immaculate, the white overstuffed furniture in the livingroom spotless, the dining-room table set as if for company, with cloth napkins tucked into crystal glasses. They had lived in the spacious home for seven years, a testament to their upward striving. Richmond, a tall, slender man born in Newport News, Virginia, had worked for USPS for thirty-two years, mostly at Brentwood and its predecessor on North Capitol Street. Brentwood was so full of old-timers that it felt like a second home. Everyone there called him Rich, never Leroy. He had met the feisty Susan there, working the line.

It was not an instant attraction. One day, a supervisor sent her over to help him manually sort mail. To the industrious Rich, all she seemed to do was complain. She was tired. She didn't feel well. Before long, he caught her catnapping.

He asked his boss not to send her over again. The next day, there she was, grumbling, napping, disappearing for long breaks. Rich asked her to speed up, and she shot him a cutting look and barked," You're not my supervisor!"Rich went back to the boss and suggested that he fire her.

Rich ran into Susan sometime later at a club, dancing, turning on the charm. He was mesmerized. He couldn't get her off his mind, her broad hips and beautiful braids. A fiery courtship began, and they were married in less than a year.

Now that their youngest child, Quentin, was seven, they found working alternate Brentwood shifts the best way of managing their hectic lives.The routine was taxing. Susan had come home from that night's shift and crawled into bed after 1 A.M., just before Rich's day began. She noticed him feebly dressing for work, coughing, looking gaunt and worn after several days of inexplicable tiredness. Not mincing words, she called out:

"You look like a crack addict! Where are you going?"

"Going to work."He sighed.

She scowled as he downed more aspirin and finished preparing to leave.

"Me?"she would say later, standing defiantly with hands on hips. "I take some medication and roll over. He'll have a hundred-and-two-degree fever and go to work!"

True, it had been years since Rich had called in sick. He was more likely to volunteer for overtime -- anything to keep the money rolling in.

Anyway, there seemed to be little use asking for time off from Brentwood's hard-line management. Unspoken tension divided the center between the almost exclusively African-American workforce, stationed behind chugging machines and conveyor belts, and the many white supervisors patrolling the production lines. The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) touted its minority hiring as a sign of progressivemanagement, but among some of the workers, the atmosphere so harkened back to the plantation days of the Old South that they derisively referred to Brentwood's floor as "the field."

Rich tried not to think in such stark racial terms. He only knew that the last time he had asked for time off, to attend his now-grown daughter's school play, his supervisor had scoffed at him. He had never asked for a favor again.

Besides, he took pride in postal work and knew he was good at it. Name a street address, a federal building or embassy anywhere in Washington, and he could rattle off the zip code from memory, the result of untold hours of training. Years ago, he had walked the streets of suburban Washington to stuff letters into mailboxes, so he knew first-hand that Americans took seriously the credo that "neither snow, nor rain"would stop the U.S. mail. There was something exhilarating about leaving a mailbox full of letters and colorful postcards, third-class catalogs and cumbersome junk mail, then watching expectant old ladies and children rush out the door to retrieve their surprises as he walked away. Sometimes, they peeked from behind curtains mysteriously, trying to speed the process. He was Santa Claus in a blue uniform ...

The Killer Strain
Anthrax and a Government Exposed
. Copyright © by Marilyn Thompson. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

Excerpted from The Killer Strain: Anthrax and a Government Exposed by Marilyn W. Thompson
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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