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FBI unveils science of anthrax investigation
By news release
Aug 22, 2008 - 10:47:30 PM
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Sandia’s work demonstrated anthrax letters contained non-weaponized form
Sandia's material characterization analysts (from left to right)
Joseph Michael, Paul Kotula, and manager Ray Goehner (photo by Randy Montoya)
.
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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. —They have worked for almost seven years in secret.
Most people did not know that the work in Ray Goehner’s materials
characterization department at Sandia National Laboratories was
contributing important information to the FBI’s investigation of
letters containing
bacillus anthracis, the spores that cause
the disease anthrax. The spores were mailed in the fall of 2001 to
several news media offices and to two U.S. senators. Five people were
killed.
Sandia’s work demonstrated to the FBI that the form of
bacillus anthracis
contained in those letters was not a weaponized form, a form of the
bacteria prepared to disperse more readily. The possibility of a
weaponized form was of great concern to investigators, says Joseph
Michael, the principal investigator for the project. This information
was crucial in ruling out state-sponsored terrorism.
In fall of 2001, the FBI considered how to best investigate the
anthrax letters. The agency convened two blue ribbon exploratory
panels, and Sandia’s name came up during both panels for its expertise
in electron and ion microscopies and microanalysis over the range of
length scales from millimeters down to nanometers. The first spore
material from the letters arrived at Sandia in February of 2002.
bacillus anthracis spores as viewed in SEM (left) and TEM (right). (Photo courtesy of Sandia National Laboratories)
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Sandia faced some uncertainty in working on this type of
investigation. Researchers signed nondisclosure agreements and agreed
to make themselves available to government agencies on short notice
when called to give information.
Joseph Michael, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) lab owner
Paul Kotula, and a team of roughly a dozen others examined more than
200 samples in those six and a half years. They received samples from
the letter delivered to the
New York Post, to former Sen. Tom
Daschle (D-S.D.), and to Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.). The samples looked
different, in part because of how the samples were prepared, which made
examination initially difficult.
When
bacillus anthracis spores are weaponized, the spores
are coated with silica nanoparticles that look almost like lint under
the microscope. The “lint” makes the particles “bouncier” and less
likely to clump and fall to the ground. That makes the spores more
respirable and able to do more damage, says Michael. Weaponization of
the spores would be an indicator of state sponsored terrorism.
“Initially, scanning electron microscopy [SEM] conducted at another
laboratory, showed high silicon and oxygen signals that led them to
conclude that the spores were a weaponized form, says Kotula. “The
possible misinterpretation of the SEM results arose because
microanalysis in the SEM is not a surface-sensitive tool,” says Kotula.
“Because a spore body can be 1.5 to 2 microns wide by 1 micron long, a
SEM cannot localize the elemental signal from whole spore bodies.”
Using more sensitive transmission electron microscopy (TEM), Kotula
and Michael’s research indicated that the silica in the spore samples
was not added artificially, but was incorporated as a natural part of
the spore formation process. “The spores we examined,” Kotula says,
“lacked that fuzzy outer coating that would indicate that they’d been
weaponized.”
Sandia’s work was the first to actually link the spore material in the
New York Post,
the Daschle and the Leahy letters. The elemental signatures and the
locations of these signatures, while not indicating intentional
weaponization, did show that the spores were indistinguishable and
therefore likely came from the same source. That conclusion was
corroborated a few years later by the DNA studies.
The materials characterization lab serves as a materials analysis
resource for a diverse collection of projects. The lab plays an
important role in stockpile surveillance, supporting Sandia’s nuclear
weapons mission.
Michael was recently released from his nondisclosure agreement and
flown to Washington, D.C., to participate in press conferences at FBI
Headquarters along with several members of research teams who’d been
asked to examine other aspects of the anthrax case.
The FBI was pleased with Sandia’s work, says Michael.
Sandia is a multiprogram laboratory operated by Sandia Corporation,
a Lockheed Martin company, for the U.S. Department of Energy’s National
Nuclear Security Administration. With main facilities in Albuquerque,
N.M., and Livermore, Calif., Sandia has major R&D responsibilities
in national security, energy and environmental technologies, and
economic competitiveness.
Sandia news media contact: Stephanie Holinka, slholin@sandia.gov,
(505) 284-9227