The Enterprise Report has exclusively obtained highly detailed U.S. government documents proving the whereabouts of now deceased Army microbiologist Bruce E. Ivins on the days the anthrax letters were mailed. The documents detail the precise "windows of opportunity" that Ivins had to mail the letters, if he was the person who did so in 2001.
These never before seen security records detail Ivin’s time at the US Army’s USARMIID laboratory in Fort Detrick, Maryland on the days in question relative to the mailings of the anthrax letters. Ivins, a US Army scientist killed himself in July 2008, after becoming the primary focus of the government’s investigation. After his death The U.S. Department of Justice, FBI and U.S. Postal Inspection Service named him as the person solely responsible for the 2001 anthrax letter attacks.
The anthrax letters were mailed from a Princeton New Jersey mailbox and postmarked September 18th and October 9th, 2001. They were sent to a variety of news media outlets and two US Senators.
The documents reveal Ivin’s “windows of opportunity” in which he would have been able to travel from Fort Detrick, Maryland to a U.S postal service mailbox in Princeton New Jersey, where the anthrax letters were dropped, according to federal authorities
As ERS News reported last week, the contents of the documents reveal that Ivins had five (5) specific “windows of opportunity” in which enough time existed for him to have made the long round trip from Fort Detrick Maryland to Princeton New Jersey. Our previous story can be read below.
The two pages of security access documents which reveal Ivin’s whereabouts at the Fort Detrick Army lab on September 17th and 18th and October 6th, 7th, 8th and 9th, 2001, can be seen here: