The anthrax scare may have been a mad scientist's attempt at bringing awareness to bioterrorism research. And, if that was the plan, "in a sick way it's begun to work," says Katie Couric.
Transcript:
There was 9/11 ... and then there was anthrax. Remember the envelopes of poison sent to members of Congress and major news organizations just weeks after the World Trade Center attacks? They killed 5 people, and for a time made opening the mail a nerve-wracking ordeal.
Last week, the Army scientist that investigators believe was responsible for those attacks, Dr. Bruce Ivins, committed suicide.
And while we'll never know for sure why a man who was supposed to stop bioterrorism might have engaged in it himself, the New York Times reports that he may have just been trying to draw attention to his field and draw more money for his research.
If that was Ivins' plan, in a sick way, it's begun to work. Billions have been spent on developing and stockpiling vaccines.
But more labs mean more people who could deliver classified information into the wrong hands. Washington needs to take this threat seriously so the next 9/11 isn't planned in a government lab.
That's a page from my notebook. I'm Katie Couric, CBS News.
he probably was forced to do it because "They" wanted to scare us with "terrorist" attacks and make him "their" scapegoat.
MissLexiMarlene 1 year ago
god damn how is she 50+ years old? i swear that is not natural.
and yea its crazy how an antiterrorist becomes a terrorist to defeat terrorism
DarkRain9000 3 years ago
A Black Operation and a Coup d'tat if I've ever seen one. Is anyone out there connecting the dots ?
rolgib 3 years ago