Judge OKs unsealing anthrax documents


Wednesday, August 06, 2008 | No comments posted.

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The chief judge of Washington’s federal courthouse on today unsealed hundreds of pages of documents in the FBI’s nearly 7-year investigation of anthrax mailings that killed five people.

The move by U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth came after consultation with Amy Jeffress, a national security prosecutor at Justice, and as FBI Director Robert Mueller prepared to brief the families of anthrax victims on details of the case.

The documents that Lamberth authorized to be released include more than a dozen search warrants aimed at Army microbiologist Bruce Ivins, whom federal investigators were closing in on as he committed suicide last week. Among other things, the papers are expected to reveal how the FBI narrowed the scope of its investigation to the Fort Detrick, Md., scientist.

The evidence that Lamberth authorized to be made public should answer many questions in the bizarre investigation.

The judge indicated that it would take until at least midday or early afternoon today to clear the clerical hurdles to a full public release of the documents, which were to be posted on both the Justice Department’s and federal courthouse’s Web sites.
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