WASHINGTON, Apr 18: The FBI arrested a Mississippi man in connection with letters sent to President Barack Obama and two other officials that are believed to have contained the deadly poison ricin, the U.S. Justice Department said.
Paul Kevin Curtis was arrested at his home in Corinth, Mississippi, and is “believed to be responsible for the mailings of the three letters sent through the U.S. Postal Inspection Service which contained a granular substance that preliminarily tested positive for ricin,” the Justice Department said in a statement.
The letters were addressed to a U.S. Senator, the White House and a Mississippi justice official, the statement said.
The ricin poison scare hit Washington after bombings at the Boston Marathon killed three people and injured 176 on Monday, but the FBI said there was no indication the incidents were connected.
The FBI said the envelope sent to Obama was received at a mail-screening facility outside the White House and was immediately quarantined. Preliminary tests showed it contained the deadly poison ricin, the FBI said
Washington was put on edge on Tuesday evening when news emerged that authorities had intercepted a letter sent to Republican Senator Roger Wicker of Mississippi that had initially tested positive for ricin.
Following the arrest, Wicker issued a statement thanking the FBI and Capitol Police “for their professionalism and decisive action in keeping our family and staff safe from harm.”
Earlier yesterday, a flurry of reports of suspicious letters and packages rattled the US capital and caused the temporary evacuation of parts of two Senate buildings. Most of the reports quickly proved to be false alarms, and business was only temporarily disrupted on Capitol Hill.
The letters to Obama and Wicker had identical language, included the phrase, “To see a wrong and not expose it, is to become a silent partner to its continuance.” They were signed, “I am KC and I approve this message,” according to an FBI operations bulletin reviewed by Reuters.
Two law enforcement sources said investigators believed the man arrested was the same person as Kevin Curtis, who they say has posted rants on the Internet and performed as an entertainer and Elvis Presley impersonator.
In an online comment on an Elvis blog post in 2007, a Kevin Curtis complained that several Elvis contests in several states “were rigged with hosts and judges getting kick-backs.” The signature was: “This is Kevin Curtis and I approve this message.”
Northern District Mississippi Public Service Commissioner Brandon Presley, who said he was related to Elvis Presley, told Reuters that Curtis contacted him via Facebook late on Sunday asking him if he were a relative of the late rock singer.
Presley said he did not know Curtis. “I don’t know if he’s fixated on Elvis or Elvis’ family or what,” he said. “We’ve been told by the authorities to be very cautious with our mail for the next few days.”
The envelopes believed to contain ricin both bore postmarks from Memphis, Tennessee, and were dated April 8. Memphis Mayor A C Wharton noted in a statement, however, that it did not mean the letters originated in that city.
An aide to Wharton said many areas near Memphis were included in its postmark – including some in neighboring northern Mississippi, Wicker’s state.
For Washingtonians, the situation was an unsettling reminder of events of nearly 12 years ago when letters containing anthrax spores were mailed to the Washington offices of two senators and to media outlets in New York and Florida, not long after the September 11, 2001, attacks in New York and Washington.
(AGENCIES)
