Behind the Bastards - How The FBI Botched the 2001 Anthrax Scare (Part 2)
Episode Date: October 7, 2025Robert discusses the mysterious 2001 anthrax attacks and how the FBI, without any real evidence, decided to destroy a man's life over it.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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Oh my gosh!
Welcome back to Behind the Bastards, a podcast where your host, Robert Evans, hasn't slept in two days.
I mean, I slept a little bit.
I fell asleep last night at like 2 a.m.
And then around 4, I woke bolt upright, like suddenly perfectly awake.
And with just feeling in my bones that some news had happened.
And for, you know, the record folks, we're recording this on September 12th, so just a couple
days after Charlie Kirk's assassination.
And I just woke up with a feeling that something had happened.
So I checked my phone and the authorities announced that they'd taken someone into custody
and they announced his name.
So from that point, I spend the rest of the night finding the shooter's family on the
internet and going through all of their social media and doing the thing that I do
because this is both what made my career and also something that's permanently damaged
my brain.
So like about a dozen friends of mine, whenever there's a weird shooting like this,
I wind up digging into some internet poisoned young man's life for several hours,
which I did, and I found some useful news and published it, posted it and stuff,
put it out, got it out there.
So now I'm, the term we used to use when I was a kid was cracked out.
How are you doing, guest today, Courtney?
Are you all right?
Oh my God, that's such an odd relationship to have with this kind of news.
Yes, yes.
I'm so sorry.
It's a, I mean, when the fucking, when the Pauway, the synagogue shooting happened, I was flying to Mexico for a vacation and I had to like run into a wine bar in the 90 minutes before my flight and write an article.
Like, this is just like what my life has been like for a while now.
It's weird, Courtney.
How are you?
Weird times.
Yeah. I'm good.
I'm just chilling.
Well, that's good.
Are you ready to learn about a different kind of.
terrorist attack, you know? I cannot wait. I honestly, I didn't know if I was going to be back for
part three, but I am so excited to hear it. No one else would I tell this story to. So, and we're
recording this on September 12th. So it's, you know, obviously this is all fresh in our minds.
You remember, I'm sure, Courtney, that on September 11th, 2001, the CIA used their low earth
orbit ion cannon to destroy the World Trade Center in New York City. The Twin Towers collapsed within
minutes. Obviously, that's one explanation. There are some experts who think that the culprit was a
group of terrorists who'd hijacked some commercial flights. Whatever the truth, we'll never know,
obviously, but whatever the truth.
Christ, Robert. Americans went crazy, right? Like, people lost. You and I, I think we remember,
like, everyone losing their minds, everyone here on this show, right, after 9-11? Oh, yeah.
Yeah. I know it's always weird to me to talk to people, which now, you know, a decent number of people
I'm social with don't have strong memories of 9-11, like.
I don't think Garrison was born.
Gare was not born.
Gare does not remember 9-11.
I remember being in high school, like, sitting in the room and watching the, watching
the second one go down.
Yeah, exactly.
I came into health class, like, right before the second one hit.
Like, I watched that live on TV.
And, like, you know, talking to, because when I say, like, my younger friends, these people
are like 27th to 30, right?
They still don't remember 9-11.
And it's important if you were, because if you were old enough to be like really cognizant
then, looking back on it, like people, like there was something that left everyone's
souls.
Like the light in their eyes was different.
People fucking, like my recollection of it is that overnight, all of the most stable,
reasonable adults in my life became like bloodthirsty.
Like it was like somebody had flipped a switch, you know?
it was a very, very, like, odd and unsettling time.
And people got in the wake of the attack, not only were they bang for blood
for whoever was responsible, but they were incredibly paranoid, right?
Because it felt like anyone might be at risk.
You know, I have very strong memories of girls in my suburban North Texas school,
like worried that Al Qaeda was going to hit, like, our middle school, which, like, obviously
that was never in the cards, but people were worried about that because everyone was losing
their minds. I think I was going to go to college in New York and I didn't go because I was
like, I don't fucking know what's going to happen. Yeah. And that's totally sensible. And so I bring this
up because obviously the anthrax attacks happened right after 9-11, but it's also before we talk
about those attacks to understand why the reaction was the way it was and why it wound up fucking
up Stephen Hatfield's life the way that it did. You have to understand how everyone was out
of their minds, every adult in the United States, or at least a majority of them, were completely
insane for the events of this story.
Mm-hmm.
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So, less than three weeks after the towers fell, a photo editor for the National
Enquirer named Robert Stevens started to feel ill.
Stevens was British by birth.
He was in a 60s.
He'd moved to Florida as a younger man to work and worked for the National Enquirer.
He was an image editor, right?
And the gist of his job was he helped to create fake news.
Now, the National Enquirer, again, if you're young enough that you don't remember these guys, they're not quite like the onion, like where they would never admit that everything was bullshit, but everything's bullshit in the National Inquirer.
You know that picking up a copy, that it's nonsense, right?
It's like bat boy fucking articles and shit like that.
And Stevens's highest profile gig for the paper was merging photographs of Freddie Prince and Raquel Welch after Prince killed himself to kind of insinuate that the two had been in a relationship together.
before he killed himself, right?
Like, that was, like, the kind of work that he did.
So this is a guy, like, you know, it's not a guy anyone would target necessarily for terrorism.
Like, this is just a dude editing pictures for the National Enquirer.
And outside of that, seems to have been a pretty normal guy.
He was certainly not the kind of person who you'd ever expect to be the target of a sophisticated terrorist attack.
But on Saturday, September 30th, 2001, he started feeling ill as his wife was driving him home from a trip to North Carolina.
The next day, he just kept getting sicker. His fever spiked, and he went home, and he went from normal ill to barely able to speak in the course of a few hours.
So on Tuesday, his wife took him to the ER at around 2 a.m. in the morning.
Doctors initially suspected meningitis, but then he started having seizures.
They did a spinal tap, which finally revealed the culprit.
Robert Stevens had been exposed to anthrax.
Samples were immediately sent to a dedicated lab, which confirmed that his symptoms were consistent with inhalation anthrax.
As we noted in the last episodes, there's multiple ways to get anthrax.
When there's natural outbreaks, it's usually not inhalation anthrax, right?
That's when someone has made like weaponized dry anthrax is when you inhale it, generally.
Sorry, I'm dumb.
Can you just, what was the cliffhanger of the last episode?
Where do we kind of leave off?
We had just gotten up to Stephen Hatfield's career, right?
Where the last thing he had done before 9-11 happens, he's built an 18-wheeler trailer.
into a bio-weapons lab model, like not a real lab, but like a fake one.
Because he's training U.S. Special Forces, how to recognize bio-weapons labs in the thought
that they're going to be invading Iraq and finding all of Saddam's bio-weapons labs that he
definitely had, right?
Yeah, perfect.
Yes, I'm all caught up.
So Hatfield is, yeah, working for the U.S. government, but he also, he has just gotten,
like, fired and denied a security clearance from the CIA because he lied about a bunch of stuff
in his backstory, right?
Yes.
So he's also starting to have career issues.
Yeah.
And anyway, it's into all of this that, yeah.
So this guy, Stevens, comes ill.
Spinal tap and whatnot reveals that it's anthrax.
And inhalation anthrax is about as rare as illnesses get in the United States.
When Stevens got sick, he was the 19th case of anthrax inhalation in the U.S. in a hundred years.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
This does not happen often, right?
Like, it's not the kind of thing you accidentally tend to do.
And once it became clear that he had inhaled anthrax, his doctor, in doctors who
start looking at this, immediately suspect terrorism, right?
This gets to the CDC very quickly once it's clear anthrax is involved.
And part of why people were ready, people were primed to be scared of this because a few
days before he got sick, news articles had come out reporting that two of the 9-11
hijackers had investigated the possibility of renting crop dusters.
before settling on their ultimate plan.
And the Fed's assumption was that they'd wanted to rent crop dusters so that they could
deploy anthrax, right?
Because if you had a sufficient quantity of dry anthrax, you could deploy it via a crop duster.
That was the assumption at the time.
I actually don't know.
They may have just wanted to fly the crop dusters into buildings, like knowing what they
actually did, but this is what people were talking about at the time, right?
That's what matters.
So Americans not only are flipping out because of 9-11, but we're primed to be expected,
like, Al-Qaeda's looking for ways to use anthrax.
and then suddenly this fucking 60-year-old image editor gets sick with anthrax.
Stephen slips into a coma a couple of days after getting to the hospital,
and he stops breathing in the late afternoon on Friday, October 5th.
He was the first of what would be five deaths from a series of anthrax letters
that were sent to a bunch of different locations.
Oh, shit.
Now, yes, and sickens a significant number of more people, right?
A bunch of people get sick, five of them die.
The CDC is contacted immediately, and the book The Demon in the freezer gives much more detail about the autopsy of Stevens and the protocols that follow after, if you're interested in all of that.
But what's important is that they ultimately tracked the cause of infection, like where he got sick, down to the mail room for the American media building, where he worked.
Another employee, Ernesto Blanco, had gone to the hospital soon after Stevens did suffering respiratory distress, and he also tested positive for anthrax.
I think he survives, but the FBI gets involved, right?
Now you've got two people who have gotten anthrax from a mailroom.
Something is happening, something intentional, right?
Yeah.
On October 15th, 10 days after Stevens died, an employee at the mail room for the Hart Senate
building office opened a letter addressed to a Senate Majority Leader Tom Dashel,
with its return address set as the fourth grade class for the Greendale School in New Jersey.
She saw powder inside and immediately called the police.
The building had to be evacuated for six.
months because anthrax spores had circulated through the HVAC system.
Cleanup alone cost like $26 million, right?
Oh my God.
Do you remember all of this?
Like, were you like, because I, this is when I, when the letter to Daschel got found is when
I remember becoming aware of the anthrax attacks.
I remember the vague like hysteria over anthrax.
I was not following beat by beat the news stories, but yeah, people were scared.
They're scared.
And this is scary, by the way.
Anthrax is fucking scary, right?
It's not unreasonable when anthrax is showing up in the mail that random people are getting sick
to be like, oh, fuck, how much worse is this going to get?
More letters start showing up in the following days.
NBC gets a letter addressed to Tom Brokaw.
There's a letter addressed to CBS, to the New York Post, to ABC.
And it doesn't take long for news to spread that across the country that someone or some
ones was executing an unprecedented biological attack on prominent publications and political
leaders.
The panic that had settled in after 9-11 dropped into high.
left into high gear. Now, initially, all we know is that there's letters with anthrax, right?
Because they can't immediately, like, read the letters because of all the anthrax, right?
Oh, right. So you have to get these letters to a secure location, which in this case was we talked
about Usamred in our last episode. That's where Stephen Hatfield worked for years.
This is the primary biological warfare defense organization in the United States, located in Fort Detrick.
They get involved at this point. The letters are sent to a secure facility.
and scientists with all of the gear that you need are able to read, yeah, and then see what's written in them, right, safely.
One of the letters read, 9-11-2001, you cannot stop us, we have this anthrax, you die now, are you afraid?
Death to America, death to Israel, Allah is great.
All in big, bold, capitalized letters, very distinctive block lettering, weird looking.
Now that's a weird message, right?
Yeah.
Obviously, there had just, I joked about CIA lasers, but there had been a massive, 9-11 was a massive Islamic terrorist attack against the United States.
That's what happened.
So the idea that this would be involved with that would be a follow-up attack was not weird.
That said, if you know anything about like Al-Qaeda or the history of Islamic terrorism, this is a weird letter, right?
Like, this doesn't actually sound like the kind of things that these people write when they're carrying out their attacks.
It's like oddly American.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, there'd be a death to America, death to Israel, and they're sure.
But it's not like, you die now.
Are you afraid?
That's weird.
Yeah, yeah.
Like, this isn't, I could, somebody who's professionally studied this.
This is weird.
I saw this in seven.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So once professionals got to look at the samples, the actual anthrax, because they're not, you know, they're looking at the letters, but they're actually able to test anthrax.
And this is important because anthrax is a biological.
Right.
thing, right? It's a bacteria, which means there's like a DNA basically for it, you know?
Like you can, you can figure there's different strains. And they, all strains are not created equal.
Different strains have different levels of, you know, infectiousness and whatnot and deadliness and
resistance to antibiotics and the like. There's a bunch of different ways to get infected with anthrax.
And, you know, you've got your naturally occurring anthraxes and then you've got your anthraxes that
are like based off of natural strains, but they've been bred for lethathlet.
or whatever, right, because people have weaponized anthrax.
Sounds like cannabis.
It is like pot.
Anthrax and marijuana have a lot in common, and one of these days we'll get those clowns
in Congress to legalize anthrax, and I'll be able to grow marijuana and anthrax together,
you know?
Finally, you can get both in the same store.
It's a bad thing to joke about on the episode about all the people who died from anthrax.
Yeah, yeah.
No, it's not funny.
I'm sorry.
No.
I'm sorry.
although anthrax would be a good name for a pot strain but I wouldn't know I've never smoked
the devil's lettuce so there are 89 known variants of the anthrax bacteria or at least there were
at the time maybe we've added a few cents I don't know I'm not an anthrax expert but when
they tested this anthrax they were able to identify its exact strain specifically the anthrax
that had been mailed to the American media building it was the AIMS strain of anthrax
AMES. The Ames strain of anthrax was initially found, I think, in 1981, and it was taken from a
14-month-old calf, like a baby cow, that perished in Texas after a natural outbreak. So this
starts out as a natural outbreak, and the aim strain is called the aim strain because there's
like a mailing error when they're sending samples of the anthrax to use Samrid. And so the
researchers there thought that it came from Ames, Iowa, and not from Texas. That's why it's
called the aim strain. It's just a little fuck up and them breeding the male or whatever.
So they just kept it, they just kept it off the cow?
Yes, they kept it and they cultured it in order to turn it into, you've got like the wet
anthrax, which is when you get like natural infections. It's wet, you know, so it's because it's
inside living wet things. And it's very difficult and take someone who is very skilled to take
that and turn it into a dry like agent, a powder that you could spread and people could
inhale it and get sick, right?
That's complicated.
And that's what they're doing to the, that's what they do to the aim strain, right?
Usamrid does.
And they are doing it.
We're not, we're not, we don't make biological weapons anymore, right?
But sort of we do.
Theoretically.
But we do for the purpose of studying how to defend ourselves, right?
Like against, okay, whatever you tell yourself.
If you've got, look, this is not the place to litigate that.
I will say that their, their argument.
is that, well, if we're worried that someone might weaponize this stuff, then we need to have
examples of it that we have weaponized in order to test and build defenses against it, right?
So that's what we're still allowed to do, because we're not supposed to be making anthrax
to stockpile as a weapon for war, right? But you can have some of it that you're turning into
this dry form in order to test different prophylactics and whatnot, right? And the aim strain
after 81 becomes the strain that is used by usamrid when they're doing anthrax research,
right? Because it's very deadly. So, I mean, and it's super contagious. So basically, because
it's one of the more deadly variants, they use it because if you're wanting to develop something
that can protect people, you want to be using the nastiest version of it that you can to develop
like a counter, right? Totally. They're starting a huge problem. We're talking government logic
here, right? I'm not defending this. I'm just explaining.
how they think, right?
Totally.
I'm not defending the U.S.
bio-weapons programs.
You can feel about that however you want,
but these are the arguments
that these guys are making, right?
That this stuff will be used against us.
It's only a matter of time,
and so we need to be making and studying it
and devoting a lot of money.
And this is important.
The fact that a lot of guys
in the bioweapons research field
think that the U.S. is not putting enough money
into bioweapons defense.
And Hatfield's one of them.
Hatfield has publicly complained about this,
and a lot of guys in his industry,
have publicly complained. And we could say, well, if you're a bioweapon scientist,
of course you think the government should be spending more money, researching bio-weapons, right?
Yeah, it's good for business. But after 9-11, it starts to seem, and especially now that now there's
anthrax attacks, suddenly everyone's taking bioweapons seriously, and suddenly a lot more money
starts going to these programs. As soon as people start dying from anthrax, US government starts
putting money into anthrax defense. Wild how that works, right? So,
Once they have identified, once the guys at Usamred know that this is the aim strain, that really narrows the field of potential culprits.
It really can't be al-Qaeda at this point, right?
Like, because this is the specific strain that Usamrid researches.
It can't like fucking Osama bin Laden's not getting his hands on the aim strain of anthrax.
How would he, right?
Yes.
So this seriously narrows the field of potential culprits, per an article by Marilyn Thompson for the Washington Post, quote,
The evidence, as compelling as a human fingerprint, shifted suspicion away from al-Qaeda
and suggested another disturbing possibility that the anthrax attacks were the work of an American
bio-weapons insider.
Now, obviously, it's possible someone else could have gotten access to the aimstrain of anthrax
and weaponized it, but the number of people in the entire country who had the technical
know-how to do this with any degree of safety, to take a wet bacteria and turn it into a dry
agent that you can use as a weapon in this way,
50 to 100 max in the whole country.
And not a lot more than that in the world.
Just like that guy with that home lab.
Right.
Yeah.
And so this is, again, and Stephen Hatfield's going to be one of those 50 to 100 people, right?
So immediately, as soon as they know this, anyone who knows anything about anthrax knows,
it's got to be somebody at a high level in research, in weapons research, by weapons research.
There's just not many other options.
outside of the weird mode, some other government who has the ability to have stolen a strain
of anthrax from Usamrid might be doing some sort of weird attack, right?
But there's not any evidence that that's the case.
But it would have had to have been, that's the only other thing it possibly could have been
at this point, right?
It's like another state-level actor doing something crazy or the much more likely thing
one of these scientists has gone rogue.
Now, one of the weird things about this case is the FBI does not seem to have wanted to
accept this immediately, right?
They really drag their feet on, like, adopting that piece of information and taking that in to their conception of what's happening here.
And in order to understand why they're acting the way they are, you have to remember they're still very much in the dark at this point.
This is just days after 9-11, really, like a couple of not long at all, like literally less than a month.
And they're still very much in the dark about a lot of the details of how the 9-11 hijackers had done what they did, right?
Like, that's still getting unraveled.
And the writing in the letters makes everyone assume Islamic terrorists.
And there's not a lot of encouragement for people in law enforcement to look deeper,
especially since most of them don't know shit about anthrax like the rest of us.
And so some of the first people to reach out to the feds about the possibility that one of these bioweapons scientists had done this were co-workers of Stephen Hatfield.
Right?
It's bio-weapon scientists who start, as soon as they hear that it's the aim strain, they start calling the FBI and being like, look, man.
And I love the story.
One of the balliest of them is this retired researcher James R.E. Smith, he had worked directly
with weaponized anthrax at Fort Detrick, right?
Which is something that Stephen Hatfield never did.
Hatfield never worked with anthrax.
James Smith is a guy who he made weaponized anthrax, right?
And so when he heard that the anthrax that had been sent through the mail was of the aim strain,
he immediately knew the culprit was one of his colleagues.
But then days and days go by without the FBI reaching out to him or any of his peers.
And he's like, why in the fuck?
Aren't they, you should be, you should be searching my house.
Do you know what I know how to do?
Like that's, that's this guy's attitude, right?
Like, why aren't you raiding me, right?
Now, the director of the FBI, and it's weird that the FBI fucks up because the director
of the FBI at this time is an unimpeachable fellow you might know named Robert Mueller.
Shut the fuck off.
Shut the fuck off.
That's right, baby.
Wow.
So he puts the Washington field office in charge of,
investigating the anthrax attacks, which is weird because the Washington Field Office is also
in charge of investigating the 9-11 attacks. This means that you've got this 35 FBI agents who are
investigating both of these things, which is like a lot, maybe too much for 35 people's plates.
That's a lot. I feel like 35 people for each of these cases would be reasonable, you know,
if not more. Now, when it came to the anthrax case, the Washington Field Office of the FBI did
gain the help of another 15 U.S.PS inspectors, which, and those guys are sharp, like the
postal office feds are scary guys. Because obviously this is a postal crime, you know.
So they're all working together on this shit. Only, but it's one of those things, you know,
the U.S.PS inspectors are good at what they do. FBI agents have a certain competences, but they
are not in general experts on science or experts on biological and chemical weapons. Only eight of
the FBI agents in the Washington office had relevant scientific experience, which means at this
point PhDs. So there are eight science PhDs on the team, which sounds like a lot and like would
be in any normal situation. But that means you only really have eight people on this team who
adequately understand immediately what the early evidence means. Yeah. Right? The USPS guys are just like,
I can tell you if it's a book or not. Yeah, I can tell you how much they paid for their stamps. I don't
I know, bro. I work for the post office. You know who else works for the post office?
Yo, mama. Oh, sorry. I was going to say the 9-11 hijackers, but that's a, that's a theory I have. We'll talk about that when we come back.
Jesus Christ.
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This is a tape recorded statement.
The person being interviewed
is Krista Gail Pike.
This is in regards
to the death of Colleen
Slimmer.
She started going off on me, and I hit her.
I just hit her
and hit her and hit her and hit her.
On a cold January
day in 1995,
18-year-old Krista Pike
killed 19-year-old Colleen Slimmer
in the woods of Knox
Tennessee. Since her conviction, Krista has been sitting on death row.
The state has asked for an execution date for Krista.
We let people languish in prison for decades, raising questions about who we consider
fundamentally unrestorable. How does someone prove that they deserve to live?
We are starting the recording now. Please state your first and last name.
Krista Pike.
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We're back.
I'm plugging my documentary Loose Mail about how the post office did 9-11.
That's surely not going to blow up my career and reputation.
It's going to be good.
It's going to be good.
Everyone can do whatever now.
It's fine.
I don't know if you've heard the news lately.
Yeah, I did.
I did.
People don't get in trouble for things anymore.
So the guy leading the FBI investigation at this point in time was an assistant director, an assistant director.
Obviously, there's more than one of the FBI named Van Harp.
And Van Harp's background was an organized crime.
He was very competent at prosecuting like mob cases, right?
His skill was in building networks of informants and interrogating people to get information about organizations, right?
And that's useful for those things.
It's not really useful for this.
He has no competence in the bio-weapons field.
He doesn't know what he's doing here.
He has no reason.
He's like, give me a guy.
I'll interrogate the fuck out of him.
Yeah, we don't have a guy.
We've got some letters and some poison, you know?
Harp's main contribution is that he names the investigation Amerithrax, which is the official
name of this, the Amerithrax investigation, the Ameritrax tax.
Great work.
C-plus.
I'm really glad whatever college you went to, you know, you didn't pay him enough.
So, and he goes, this tells you, he has, he has full-on cop investigator brain because he becomes
obsessed immediately rather than being really interested in what the strain of anthrax is and what
biologically is going on with the poison and what that tells him.
He gets obsessed with the writing on the letters, like the handwriting, and with the return
address of that one letter that was returned to fourth grade, that Greendale school, right?
Right? In Colorado? Or not Colorado. That's community. I forget what Greendale this was supposed to be. Different one. Now, a smarter man than Harp might have said, hey, whoever I did this is clearly very intelligent. And the letters are written in a weird blocky style, which is probably just the result of someone disguising their handwriting.
New Jersey, by the way.
Greendale School is in Franklin Park, New Jersey, by the way.
Jersey. Yes, thank you, Sophie.
You're welcome.
Nobody's smart enough to weaponize anthrax
would use their normal handwriting on the letter, right?
They would do something like make it weird block letters.
But he's convinced that there's something to learn,
which is, again, he buys into this stuff that a lot of Americans
and all cops do, that forensic science works
when it often and mostly doesn't.
Like, you know, fingerprints are kind of real,
but often not the way that the cops say that they are.
And stuff like handwriting analysis and gate analysis is fucking, I'd say it's voodoo,
but like voodoo I have a lot more respect for than that kind of bullshit, you know?
Totally.
Even on the reporting, the Kirk reporting, when they were like, we got an elbow indentation.
It's like, what the fuck are you going to do with that?
And again, they were so like Cash Patel was so like, yeah, we're going to get him.
Oh, Cash Patel.
No, no, because you don't know what, again, and it's the, the FBI was more competent at this point in time, but as the story is going to tell you, not that competent still.
Sure.
So, Harp or, like, he is, he gets fucking obsessed, Van Harp gets fucking obsessed with the handwriting and with the return address on this.
And he's certain that they're going to find something there.
So he appoints another veteran agent to specifically looking into those aspects of the letter.
And this guy, again, is an agent whose only experience is in busting organized crime and the like.
His name is Bob Roth.
And so he starts investigating the letter itself.
Bob Roth, I love that.
Bob Roth.
Yeah, a lot of Fed names here.
He consults a handwriting analyst, per the Washington Post.
This analyst, quote, proposed setting up a computer sting operation in an effort to identify the killer.
Smith, the analyst, would try to lure the perpetrator to two websites, hand to mine.com and anthraxhunt.com, by making
provocative statements about the killer's handwriting and publicizing the sites and interviews
and on TV's America's Most Wanted, right?
So that's their plan is we'll make a website to trap this guy.
He's got to want to brag or something like that, right?
Again, it's all like, well, I watched some movies about serial killers logic.
Which is as real as most of this behavioral analysis shit tends to be.
So the FBI spends two months on this sting operation and there's absolutely no result.
not they get nothing they do get people to go to those websites and two of them are on their
list but those guys didn't do anything like on their suspect list but those guys don't
it's just a hobby it's just a waste yeah just a hobby yeah they're just they're just like
tweaking the FBI's nose um and in fact as time goes on it becomes clear to everyone
nothing the FBI is doing seems to be bringing them any close to a culprit and this is a real
problem for the bureau because they missed 9-11 right
They're not the only agency that should have caught 9-11, but stopping 9-11s is one of the FBI's jobs, and they did not.
And now these anthrax attacks have happened, and they can't catch the anthrax attack guys.
And it wasn't all that long ago that a federal building in Oklahoma City was blown up, and they didn't stop that.
And then, you know, if you go back before that, you've got Ruby Ridge and Waco.
The FBI doesn't look great at either of those.
So the FBI is really hungry for some good PR.
They want this to get solved.
They kind of need a win, you know?
Yes.
They're your friend who just got, like, broken up with and fired from their job in the same week.
And you're, like, just taking them out to try to – you're like, walking up to someone and go to the bathroom.
You're like, would you just tell him he looks good tonight?
Like, he needs it, man.
Totally.
That's where the FBI is here.
And that's what's going to wind up fucking up Stephen Hatfield's life, right?
So as this case drags on without any sort of, like, clear suspects, agents start complaining to their bosses.
about overtime and about how futile the investigation is.
Bob Roth begs publicly to be removed from the case.
And this brings me back to that bio-weapons expert, James Smith, that I talked about, right?
The guy who gets angry that the FBI hasn't shown up at his house yet.
Now, by this point, he's so furious that he decides to take action.
So he sends a letter to Tom Ridge, the chief of Homeland Security, where he says, hey,
I'm a bio, I'm one of the top handful of bio-weapons experts in the United States.
I understand anthrax.
and he describes the kind of whoever pulled off this attack these are this is his work
experience and this is his educational background and then he ends the letter by saying
this individual is me because this man has balls big enough to crush a mac truck right
whoa like he he is like I could have done this easily why haven't you come to my house
and the FBI does go to his house at this point right yeah obviously they don't find anything
he's innocent but he accomplishes his goal which is that at the feds after him and especially
And not that none of them, some of them had been looking in the direction of bioweapon scientists, but not enough.
And he really gets them to churn their focus to Fort Detrick and another facility in Utah where weaponized anthrax was stored.
And scientists who knew how to do that shit worked, right?
So kudos to jet like the balls of sending a letter to the director of Homeland Security being like, I am one of the only people in the country who could have pulled off this terrorist attack.
What are you doing?
Yeah.
Where are you?
So for Steve Hatfield, like, he always exaggerated his resume, like, 25 to 75 percent.
So it's like, they're going to need to account for that.
And that's going to be one of the things that Descott is part of why he gets in hot water is that it's maybe some people will say he exaggerated his competence at making biological, a dry biological agents.
And that may be part of why he got focused on, although I don't really want to labor on that.
Because, again, this is the FBI's fault, not Hatfield's fault.
Yes.
Okay.
So this does create a problem, the fact that the, like, the FBI is now focusing on the actual anthrax itself and on these scientists.
Because once they realize that's the kind of investigation this is, they also realize we don't have the equipment in-house or the people to analyze anthrax properly.
Like, we can't do this on our own.
We have to use outside bioweapons laboratories.
and the people working at them are all our suspects.
Like the only people that we can trust to analyze this stuff
are also the people who might be weaponizing it, right?
You see how this is a problem.
This is a problem.
What about the guy who rode in?
Right.
Well, they do check in on him first.
They knock on his door, right?
Like, they do check him out.
And he's like, and then they start talking to him
and they start talking to other guys.
And as they're interviewing these guys,
they start to get like some hints.
right? And this leads them, you know, because nothing else is working, they opt for the law enforcement equivalent of homeopathic medicine, which is criminal profiling. And the only things that they have to go on when they're trying to make a profile is the nature of the attack, that it's an anthrax attack and the targets that were picked, right, as well as the handwriting and the messages left on the letters. Very little. And from this, the feds concluded that the terrorist was a middle-aged white man with a scientific background who was angry at the government and picked his targets so they'd make it.
the news. And I think this is a case of after Smith reaches out to them and says it's definitely
a scientist, they work backwards and are like, our analysts have come up with a profile,
right, of this guy. Per the Washington Post, quote, it was likely FBI analyst James Fitzgerald said
that the criminal had timed the letters to take advantage of the 9-11 panic and hoped to use
them to draw attention to his special as yet unknown cause. Now, that's not super helpful.
Was it totally unrelated?
We don't actually know fully, but we'll get to that.
I will say this is the thing where there's not a 100% answer as to what happened here.
We still don't have a probable person who did it who's dead now, but we don't know 100% who did it or why.
We actually still don't.
That's one of the weird things about this.
But once investigators start going down this road, and once they have this profile together, increasingly,
the name Stephen Hatfield starts coming up in their interrogations of other scientists and their
interviews because he's a middle-aged white scientist who's just been fucked over by the CIA,
right? Because they denied him a top secret security clearance and then somebody got his
security clearance taken away and that starts costing him work, right? He's getting it like he's
already has a cause to be angry is what people are saying, right? And once the FBI starts whittling their
suspect list down, then they're hearing this guy.
name over and over again, Hatfield's one of the few people who knows how, who could make this,
and he's pissed off at the government right now, you know? Now, part of why his name comes up is,
I think he seems to have been, shall we say, maybe a polarizing guy in the workplace. There are
some stories about him doing stuff like eating snacks while in his, like, wearing his, like,
the full hazmat suit and, like, stories that he, like, made out with a girlfriend at the,
the biohazard facility and stuff. Um, it's hard to tell how much of them are
are true, which is why I'm not laboring on them a lot, because, like, once he becomes the
public suspect, people just start saying shit about Stephen Hatfield, right?
What I think it's fair and safe to say is that he's a polarizing figure, and so a number
of his colleagues, when the feds are like, one of you guys has to have done this, he's the
name that comes up to some of his colleagues, right?
Yeah, this guy's a weird asshole.
That's, I think, what is basically happening.
Some of his colleagues think that, and that's how.
his name starts coming out, right? Now, Hatfield's job at SAIC involved training special forces guys
for encountering chemical and biological weapons labs and attacks. And as part of that,
one of his duties was designing theoretical bioweapon dispersal devices. In essence,
part of his job was to think like a terrorist and to build shit. Like not long before the
attack, he builds like a backpack device that could, quote, spray germs in a combat situation.
And obviously any country with a large military is going to have guys doing stuff like this, right?
Thinking up horrible things so you can figure out how to defend against them.
That's the best way to look at it, right?
But now that there's an anthrax attack, suddenly this guy who before had been doing a job that was like patriotic seems a lot more suspicious, right?
Well, this guy knows how to make terrorist weapons for a living.
And we just had one of these attacks, and he seems angry at the government and may be unstable.
Now, once the FBI starts looking into Hatfield, they do uncover some of the same stuff that I brought up last episode, right?
Both that this guy's in Rhodesia during that anthrax outbreak that he's got, I mean, the fact that he goes to Rhodesia at all, kind of sketchy, like that he's got this kind of weird history.
They find out about the lecture that I talked about last episode in which Steve gave way too much detail on how you could sneak biological weapons into the White House using a wheelchair, right?
Stories like that don't make you seem more innocent to the FBI in this scenario.
Totally.
But his grievance is with the government.
It's not with like the fucking tabloids, right?
Yes.
And again, when you think about it, it never made all that much sense that they were so certain it was this guy because there's never that much evidence.
But they're desperate.
Again, they'd missed 9-11 and they're really under pressure to not fuck this up.
and this is the only lead they've got.
And it just seems like it really must be him.
And I think part of it is that a lot of these FBI investigators,
when they start talking to Hatfield's coworkers and reading up on him,
they don't like him either.
And so they decide the fact that they don't think he's a good person
means that he must have done this.
And those are two separate things, right?
Like, you can feel however you want about stuff.
There's a lot of people I dislike that I don't think could weaponize anthrax or would, right?
Now, obviously, there's some blame in the fact that Hatfield's resume, he listed himself as having a working knowledge of wet and dry biological agents, which is why he's on that short list of people who could have done this.
But, you know, that was also his job, right?
And even Hatfield has said he expected the FBI to look in to him.
He expected them to search his house.
He was waiting for it, right?
And so he's not surprised when they, they like, get a hold of the fake bio-weapons lab that he made for his training gig.
and they test that to see if he made anthrax in it,
and it turns up negative, right?
But he's still their suspect.
In November of 2001, a second letter
is sent to Tom Daschle's office.
Now, this one, they had new protocols,
so they were irradiating the letters
that came in at that point.
So the powder is safe.
I think it's been like rendered safe
via irradiation by the time
that they open it up.
So it's not dangerous when they open it up.
It'll just give you cancer, no problem.
Yeah, maybe it'll just give you cancer.
I don't know.
But this letter was sent
from London. They know that much. And at the same time it's sent, Hatfield is in England
training to become a UN weapons inspector in Iraq, right? Oh, fuck. And agents confirmed that he
rented a car during his visit, which no one else in his group did. So that seems really
suspicious. And so that one, that does, no, no, that is a thing where if you're a responsible
agent working with that info, that's a reason to look into this guy. I think even Stephen Hatfield
would say, like, yeah, that's a thing you want to check up on, right? Now, where things get more
Ritchie is another package arrives a little later at a Nevada office for Microsoft with anthrax in it,
and this one was mailed from Malaysia.
And Stephen's girlfriend at the time came from Kuala Lumpur.
Now, she didn't live in Malaysia still.
It's pretty thin stuff to be like, are you thinking he like roped her or a family member
into like, but how did he get the anthrax over there?
Like, what is the whole chain of custody you imagine for this anthrax attack that you're thinking
he did because his girlfriend comes from like that shows you how thin the FBI's evidence is right
like that's like okay man I don't know I think you're reaching now homie but the fact that you know
they've got there's just enough here you know that thing about London is just suspicious enough
that he never no one ever overtakes him on their list and so by the start of 2002 Hatfield is not
publicly suspect number one but he's the FBI's only real suspect and they've talked to enough of his
former and current colleagues, that a lot of people in his orbit know that he's being
investigated very closely, right?
He is aware that they're looking at him very closely.
And this is where a molecular biologist and citizen investigator named Barbara Rosenberg
enters the picture.
Now, unlike most citizen investigators, Barb did have real qualifications.
She was a biological arms control expert employed by the Federation of American Scientists,
chemical and biological arms control program, right?
So FAS, the Federation of American Scientists,
has a chemical and biological arms control program.
She's with that.
And this is a small field, as we've talked about.
And given her position in that field,
Rosenberg is aware that the FBI is questioning her colleagues.
And she is hearing the same name over and over again
that her colleagues are giving out
and that the FBI is hearing.
She's hearing Stephen Hatfield's name, right?
Now, the responsible thing for her to have done
would have been to sit back and wait
because Barbara knew damn well that Hatfield was being looked at.
But she didn't think the feds were looking hard enough.
So she starts writing memos, which are effectively blog posts,
and she's publishing them on the FAS website.
She publishes the first in January of 2002.
Per an article in Salon by Anthony York.
Rosenberg says her mimos began as an effort to pressure the FBI,
which she is repeatedly accused of dropping the ball in its investigation.
I began just putting together the data that was available,
discussing it on this email list.
Then people started sending me information.
I sort of became a center for collecting information on the subject, she says.
All right.
Good on you, Barbara.
Yeah, you can see where this comes from a good place, but you can also see the whole citizen investigator thing can end badly a lot of the time, right?
Is it maybe people are putting together stuff that doesn't need to be put together.
Now Rosenberg doesn't name Hatfield in any of the memos that she published online.
But some of these she's sending directly to the feds.
and she does describe him.
She describes the likely culprit
as someone who, quote,
must be angry at some biodefense agency.
And a couple of months later,
in early spring 2002,
she writes another memo.
Early in the investigation,
a number of insight experts,
at least five that I know about,
gave the FBI the name
of one specific individual
as the most likely suspect.
That person fits the FBI profile
in most respects.
Now, she doesn't name Hatfield at this point,
but she describes his background history
and personality in such detail
that anyone tangential to their small world
would have recognized him.
Because it was so obvious who she was talking about,
Hatfield opted not to publish this memo openly.
She put it on a list serve,
operated by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute,
which Salon describes as a place where bioweapons experts and journalists
lurk to share theories on, among other things,
the anthrax killer.
Some of the theories that have been voiced on the list serve
have found their way into media reports.
Others have not.
So she puts it, instead of publishing it openly,
she puts it on basically a forum
where she knows it's going to find its way to the media,
Right? And find its way to people in government and people in law enforcement. And you can critique her and Hatfield will for basically dropping the speculation in a place where it was guaranteed to get press attention while pretending that's not what I'm trying to do. And it does get a lot of attention. The Senate Judiciary Committee invites her to a closed door meeting with several FBI agents, including Roth. And we don't know precisely what's said in that meeting or if she names Hatfield. But that's what Hatfield believes and with some good reason. Because the day after this meeting, June 25th,
2002, FBI agents visit and search his apartment. Now, Hatfield had consented to allow agents to
swab his apartment. He actually goes to the FBI offices to sign a consent form to let them
swab for evidence of anthrax, right? Because he thinks it's of course reasonable that they're looking
into me. They should be. They should be looking into everyone at my level. And I want to clear up
any suspicion immediately. Yes, you can swap my house, right? And that's what he thinks they're going to do.
When he gets back home, he sees that they've torn his apartment apart and that his apartment is surrounded by news vans.
There's dozens of cameramen all around because the FBI tipped off the press that they were raiding this guy.
Because, again, they need good PR.
They need to be seen taking action to stop this.
They need to be seen to have caught the motherfucker, right?
And they don't have enough to charge him yet.
And I might say, probably shouldn't be ruining people's names if you don't have enough evidence to charge them on anything.
but they're kind of desperate.
So again, this is like all of the stuff they're never supposed to do.
The FBI is not supposed to comment on ongoing investigations, let alone tip the press
off that they're going to be raiding someone's house, that they have no fucking hard
evidence on, right?
Like, they were so sure they were going to find something, I think is why they did it, right?
But they don't find anything.
Now, that said, the fact that nothing gets found here, the fact that he doesn't get charged,
I think if you're a responsible reporter, I hope.
that if I was looking at this at the time, I'd go, oh, well, maybe it must not be this guy,
right?
It searched his house.
They didn't find any evidence of it.
But he does have that girlfriend.
But he's girlfriend's molation, you know?
So the media starts writing about Stephen Hatfield at this point, right?
Now, they don't always name him for liability reasons, but they are aware, too.
And there's money to be made in writing about this, because this is the big case at the time.
And one of the major guys who's really focusing on Stephen Hatfield is Nicholas Christoff of the New York
Times, who we're all aware of still.
This motherfucker.
He starts publishing columns in which he names Hatfield Mr. Z and cites confidential sources,
which are FBI agents, to make the case that Hatfield had only avoided arrest thus far
because he was a white man and not an Arab national.
Christoph also brought up Hatfield's relationship to Rhodesia and without evidence accused him
of participating in genocide in a column framed as an open letter to the FBI.
Have you examined whether Mr. Z has connections to the biggest anthrax outbreak among humans ever recorded,
the one that sickened more than 10,000 black farmers in Zimbabwe in 1978 to 80?
There is evidence that the anthrax was released by the white Rhodesian army fighting against black guerrillas,
and Mr. Z has claimed that he participated in the white army's much feared cello scouts,
could rogue elements of the American military have backed the Rhodesian army
and anthrax and cholera attacks against blacks?
And like, no.
First off, the Rhodesian military used chemical and biological.
Use cholera, weaponized it.
We know they did.
They did it, and we know how they did it.
They wrote about it.
He's like, oh, I got to bang this column out.
And we also know that.
Hadfield's in college when he's in Rhodesia.
He doesn't know how to weaponize anthrax.
He's like 20.
Like, he's not a doctor yet.
He was a, if he served in the military, he was like, I think he did for a period of time,
but he's like a private, right?
Like, he's not heading up their bio.
He's not a scientist then.
It's this classic like, well, he's a bio-weapons expert now.
So clearly when he was a child, he must have also been a bio-weapons expert.
Like, no, man, he was a college student.
He didn't know shit yet.
Crazy.
It's so funny.
Oh, my God.
It's so funny.
That's a hilarious reminder that, like, sometimes these people don't know shit about what they're writing about.
No, no.
That is that not knowing shit about fuck is the Nicholas Christoph's story in a nutshell.
So Rosenberg insists that none of this, none of what happens to Hadful after this point is her fault,
and that she took pains not to name him, right?
Hatville obviously feels differently.
I think he's going to sue her after this.
He's very angry about what she did and about Christoph.
And it is worth noting that in her memos,
Rosenberg engages in similar kinds of conspiratorial thinking to Christoph,
per one that she put out in June of 2002.
The suspect is part of a clique that includes
high-level former Usamrid scientists and high-level former FBI officials.
Some of these people may wish to conceal any suspicions they have
about the identity of the perpetrator
in order to protect programs and sensitive.
information. This group most likely agreed with David Franz, former commander of Yusamrit,
when he said, I think a lot of good has come from it, the anthrax attacks. From a biological
or medical standpoint, we have now five people who have died, but we're about to put six billion
into our budget into defending against bioterrorism. And like, that's a fucked up thing for
David Franz to say. But she's alleging that, like, there's a conspiracy of FBI agents and
scientists to carry out anthrax attacks to get money from the government, right?
It's like, you're not supposed to say that part out loud.
Yeah, you've got to have more than seems right to me if you're going to make that claim, right?
Oh, so funny.
Yeah.
So I would argue, I think that these allegations, she's out on a limb here, right?
Now, Rosenberg does write that Hatfield's career setbacks caused by the CIA might be a motive.
But also, and this is where it's incoherring, it's like, she's both saying that, like, well, this guy's got a reason to be angry at the government because the CIA kind of fucked him over.
but also he's in with a high-level clique of scientists and feds who are going to cover up an anthrax attack together.
Like he both can't keep his security clearance and he's part of this conspiracy, which is it?
Because it seems like both can't happen, right?
Like, at any rate, all of this has a calamitous impact on Steve Hatfield's life and career.
In very short order, SAIC lets him go.
This may have had roots in the fact that the CIA didn't consider him fit for a security clearance,
a ball which had started rolling before the anthrax attacks, but that can't be all of it.
The DIA, the Defense Intelligence Agency, considered Hatfield their very best bio-weapons expert.
He is very highly regarded by them.
And they thought he is so indispensable that when SAIC lets him go for like laboratory etiquette violations, basically,
they begged to have him brought back as a contractor so that he can continue teaching classes to guys about to be deployed to Afghanistan.
And SAIC agrees.
Like, that's how much the DIA likes this guy.
Now, because he's a qualified professional within demand skills,
Hatfield succeeds in getting another job after he loses his position at SAIC very quickly.
He's hired to be the associate director of a Louisiana State University program
for training first responders and how to deal with terrorist attacks.
However, the program is funded by a DOJ grant,
and once the DOJ finds out Hatfield's gotten the job,
they order LSU to cease and desist using him, and the job offer is rescinded.
So now he's lost his job, and maybe he did.
did something to justify it at SAIC.
I've certainly heard that alleged.
I don't know.
But the second one is the DOJ saying don't hire this guy
because we think he's a terrorist, right?
And he hasn't been convicted as shit.
Yeah.
Things only get worse from there.
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On a cold January day in 1995,
18-year-old Krista Pike killed 19-year-old Colleen Slemmer in the woods of Knoxville, Tennessee.
Since her conviction, Krista has been sitting on death row.
The state has asked for an execution date for Krista.
We let people languish in prison for decades, raising questions about who we consider fundamentally unrestorable.
How does someone prove that they deserve to live?
We are starting the recording now.
Please state your first and last name.
Krista Pike
Listen to Unrestorable Season 2, Proof of Life, on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And we're back, and we're talking about Stephen Hatfield's life starting to unravel.
Per an article in the Atlantic, quote, other prospective employment fell through.
No one would return his calls.
job vanished after Hatfield emerged from a meeting with prospective employers to find FBI
agents videotaping them.
His savings dwindled, and he moved in with his girlfriend.
So that is the fact that, like, coming out of a job interview to find FBI agents videotaping
you, this is part of a tactic that the FBI uses.
This is a known thing.
Like, they talk about this.
They train agents to do this.
It's called bumper locking.
And it's called bumper locking because the idea here is that you are physically surveilling
someone 24-7 whenever they leave their house, and you are doing it so obviously that they know
the whole time, right?
And the reason you do that is so they'll slip up, right?
So that they'll fuck up, they'll screw up when driving, and they can get pulled over
and searched.
You can get them with some sort of petty charges then, right?
Like, you're just trying to make them fuck up because you're sure they did whatever
it is you suspect them of, and you just need to make them slip up, you know?
Like, that's why you do this.
Now, we might call this harassment and abuse.
and, like, hideously unethical to do to a citizen who has not committed a crime as far as
anyone's aware of, right?
But this is what the FBI does.
Brad Garrett, an FBI special agent at the time, explained to Frontline, quote,
management was convinced he was the right guy.
And so as a result, there were, you know, intense surveillance, bumper lock type surveillance,
of Dr. Hatfield that went on from months.
Now, Hatfield would later allege that local law enforcement, presumably acting at the FBI's
behest, harassed him as well.
He was pulled over heading back from dinner one night in D.C.
And issued a warning for failing to signal a lane change.
And then after he leaves that stop, like several minutes later, he's pulled over again for a turn signal-related issue.
And the cop asks if he's been drinking.
And Hatfield says, I had a single drink with dinner.
He gets ordered out of the car and immediately arrested.
He tries to have, like, a blood alcohol test performed to prove that he's sober, but they won't let him do that.
And he's forced to attend counseling, and he spends the week into jail.
Now, do I know that Hatfield was definitely sober during that stuff?
of course not.
And he will admit that as this nightmare went on, he began drinking more heavily.
But I guess ultimately, I don't have trouble believing that the dragnet around him was more
to blame for what happened than his personal habits because what's going on here is insane.
Now, because the bioterrorism weapons research world is a small one, Steve's social circle
is made up of a lot of his colleagues.
And so he loses that social circle because these people have to detach from him in order to
avoid damaging their own careers because he is suspected of terrorism.
him. One of the few colleagues who stuck with him is a guy named Jim Klein. And Jim says, basically, like, I stayed with him because I just thought he was going to kill himself. He told the Atlantic, you have the world against you, and only a few people are willing to look you in the eye and tell you, I believe you. I mean, to this day, I really don't know how the guy survived. And it's, I mean, it's so sad. It's a bummer. So five weeks after that first June raid where his house gets searched, the FBI searches his house again, this time with a warrant and dogs. And Hatfield makes the mistake of petting one of
of the dogs, and the dog reacts positively to him, and the agent handling the dog says,
he's identified you as the anthrax killer.
Jesus Christ.
What?
As Stephen later recalled, it took every ounce of restraint to stop from laughing.
They said, we know you did it.
We know you didn't mean to kill anyone.
I said, am I under arrest?
They said, no.
I walked out, rented a car, and went to see an attorney about suing the hell out of these people.
Yes.
Yes.
I mean, yeah, that's a normal response, right?
And he does. He does. And, you know, he gets, that's how this all ends. But it goes on for a long time before we get to that point. The raids continued. His storage locker gets raided by the FBI. And then a farm his dad owns gets rated by the FBI. The FBI raids his girlfriend's townhouse because he's living there. She later tells the Atlantic, they told me your boyfriend murdered five people as they tore through her home, destroying some of her valued possessions. So as August of 2002 dawns, the FBI has done all of the
this to Stephen Hatfield and found no evidence linking him to the anthrax attacks, or as far as I'm
aware, any crime at all. Now, at this point, you might say the whole FBI has been going after
this one man to try to find a single connection to this crime, and we haven't found one. Maybe he's
innocent. Maybe he's not the guy, right? You and I might think that, but that's not how Attorney
General John Ashcroft thought. Now, John Ashcroft, being a crafty man, decides to do something that
no U.S. Attorney General has ever done.
He decides to name the subject of an active investigation.
And on August 6th, 2002, he tells America that Stephen Hatfield is a person of interest
in the anthrax attacks, right?
Which is basically saying, hey, everybody, get him.
This guy did it, you know?
Incredible.
I hope he got so much money.
He does.
I mean, and again, I don't like him now.
He's in the Trump admin now.
I don't think he's a good person.
but he is absolutely the victim here.
Yes.
So the harassment continues.
Hatfield's phone is tapped.
Surveillance cameras are installed outside his girlfriend's condo.
When his lawyer offered to have Stephen wear a tracking device, the Fed said no.
They even turned down his lawyer offers, I'll let any time he leaves the house, you can have FBI agents drive with him.
And they're like, no.
His attorney later alleged that the FBI was sweating him, quote, trying to get him to go over the edge.
Given where Hatfield sits today in the Trump administration, it would,
be easy for me to just question his claims about what they did at a partisan disgust.
But this really is one of the worst stories of federal overreach into a civilian's life I've
ever read.
The FBI is not supposed to comment at all in matters pertaining to ongoing investigations.
But for Hatfield, not only do they name him, FBI agents keep leaking info, embarrassing
shit that they find about him to the media.
A lot of the quotes and stories about him come out initially because the FBI leaks them
to people, right?
All this stuff about kind of the sketchier parts of his back.
Like, that's how some of that stuff gets out, right?
And, you know, Hatfield's reputation isn't spotless, and I'm certainly not trying to, like, carry water for the guy.
But also, basically 100% of people, if the whole FBI started trying to uncover ugly things about them, would find some ugly things, right?
Yeah.
It's why it's fucked up for them to do stuff like that, you know?
And the fact that he had a, he was a guy who had done some, and said some stuff that wasn't great in the past, does not just.
justify the harassment that he faced.
From the fucking FBI.
Per the Atlantic, quote, with Hatfield's face
splashed all over the news, strangers on the street stared.
Some asked for his autograph. Hatfield
was humiliated. Embarrassed to be
recognized, he stopped going to the gym. He stopped
visiting friends, concerned that the FBI would harass
them, too. Soon he stopped going out in public
altogether. Once an energetic and ambitious
professional who reveled in the 14-hour
workdays, Hatfield now found himself staring
at the walls all day. Television became his
steady companion. I'd never really
watched the news before, Hatfield says. And now I'm seeing
my name all over the place and all these idiots like Geraldo Rivera saying, is this the
anthrax animal? Is this the guy who murdered innocent people? You might as well have hooked me up
to a battery. It was sanctioned torture. Jim Bro down. This goes on for a full year and then a
second year. Does this happen during Bush? Yeah, this is throughout the whole Bush administration.
This goes on for years. Wild. He's not like radicalized against a Republican administration.
No. I mean, I think he's anti, I don't think he likes the Bush admin very much, but like, again, a lot of Trump guys don't, right? And the whole distrust of the FBI thing, Trump has too. Like, it makes a lot of sense why he winds up in Trump's orbit, right? Like, he's the only one who really has a justified reason to be as angry at the FBI as they all are. And the media, too, to be fair, you know? So Hatfield starts drinking more heavily, right? And his life narrows to obsessively watching the
allegations against him in the news and blacking out, right?
Eventually, in August of 2003, he takes offensive action.
He sues the federal government, and this process winds on for a while, but it does eventually
he's able to get Special Agent harp on the stand, and a harp has to admit that the FBI is
going so hard after Hatfield because it was publicly seen as having fucked up in the face
of several major terrorist attacks, and they needed something to, like, restore public
confidence. All of these leaks to the press by the FBI were part of a strategy to rebuild that
trust. Harp himself admitted to speaking confidentially to more than a dozen journalists,
you know, giving details of Hatfield's story. For their part, the press was happy to have
articles, and guilty or not, Hatfield was a story. One reporter even called his girlfriend's
former in-laws because her husband had died like a year or two earlier, and they asked if
they thought that Hatfield had murdered her husband, like their dead relative.
Like, that's insane.
Like, that's just crazy shit from a journalist.
There's numerous other gotcha moments that fail to pan out in the years that Hatfield spends under investigations.
Investigators found that he had been taking Cypro while staying in an isolated cabin, which sounds really suspicious.
You know, why would he be taking this powerful antibiotic?
Did he have a UTI?
He had like a nasal and sinus infection.
Yeah.
Okay.
I only know Cypro from UTIS.
Yeah.
Well, it's good for other stuff, too.
Okay, gotcha.
And he also, this isolated cabin that the news described was like a three-bedroom weekend home in Virginia that his friend owned, right?
Perhaps the craziest moment came near the end of 2002, per the Washington Post.
The FBI learned from a Hatfield Business Associate that he'd once talked hypothetically about how a smart person might dispose of materials contaminated with anthrax by throwing them in a body of water.
The tip was specific enough to lead a team to the Frederick Municipal Forest in a network of ponds, then solidly frozen.
agents sealed off Bucolic country roads with crime scene tape,
then expert divers plunged in.
Over the course of several frigid weeks,
divers pulled up a collection of intriguing items.
The most promising was a plastic or plexiglass box
that appeared to be fashioned into a crude scientific glove box,
with holes cut into the sides to allow for gloved hands to work within it.
Now, I found news reports at the time, several of them that describe it this way,
as like, oh, it's a scientific plexiglass glove box, you know,
for working on specimens that are dangerous to touch.
Do you want to know what it seems like it actually was?
Oh, my God.
I'm so nervous.
It was probably a turtle trap.
It's probably a turtle trap.
Why did I think it was a jerk-off machine?
I was like, probably.
I was closer to Courtney.
We know Virginia, Courtney.
It's every, every lake is filled with jerk-off machines.
The FBI found one glove box and a thousand jerk-off machines in these lakes.
It was just divers bringing up jerk-off machines all day long.
It's been a third of their budget storing them.
That was the FBI's real problem in 2003.
Too many jerk-off machines from the lakes.
Incredible.
So in spring of 2003, Hatfell was being driven by his girlfriend to a paint store
when FBI agents, bumper locking him,
ran a red light in a school zone during school hours when they were children out.
Hatfield has his girlfriend pull over so he can take a picture of the agents and yell at
them for endangering kids.
The agents drive off and they drive off and because of how close.
they are to him, they run over his foot and injure him as they're doing it.
And because he has no health insurance or savings, he turns down an ambulance ride, right,
to go to the hospital, and then Washington police who show up ticket him for, quote,
walking to create a hazard.
Because again, the whole security state is focused on this one dude, right?
Like, again, I don't want to like fucking apologize for him in the present day,
but how could this not blow your head up, right?
The whole FBI and a lot of the security state outside of it being focused on just you, right?
Like that would drive you crazy.
That's a crazy thing to deal with.
Now, by 2004.
I think he's justified.
I understand a little bit, right?
Where he comes from here.
By 2004, after two years without any leads, the investigation efforts against Hatfield started to ebb.
He began to resume something that resembled a normal life, even flying to Sri Lanka in early 2005 to help provide medical
relief aid after a terrible tsunami.
Gradually, he got his life back, but what he never got was an apology or an official
announcement that he was no longer suspected of having done it, right?
You know, by the time we hit like 2005-6, it's been years.
I think most people who know him are like, that probably wasn't Stephen, they probably
would have arrested him by now if he had done it, right?
But they don't say anything.
How long does the lawsuit take?
I mean, the lawsuits are going on for years after he stops being the suspect, right?
Because once he's announced that he's no longer the suspect, it gets a lot easier to sue people, you know?
And, you know, this is not a podcast about that kind of stuff.
So we're not going to go into detail about it.
But what I will say is that in 2007, the FBI brings in a new team to look at the case because the old one had not done the job, right?
And so after six years, they're like, we should probably get some new guys looking at this.
Maybe we could solve it, you know?
And this new team accept Hatfield's protestations of innocence, right?
Either they're just smarter than their colleagues or they're legitimately smart.
and are like, what the fuck is wrong with you guys?
Like, you didn't find anything
and you kept harassing him for five years?
The fuck is wrong with you?
The most compelling piece of evidence
against the idea that Hatfield had done this
is that despite his expertise
and despite what he did for a living,
Stephen Hatfield had never in his entire life
had direct access to anthrax.
He was a virus guy.
It's a bacteria.
This is not his kind of agent, right?
He knows theoretically how to weaponize anthrax,
right?
I think that's the claim that at least that he makes on his...
I don't know how to do it, so I can't say that he could.
But my understanding of his resume is that he said that he had the ability to.
But he had never worked with anthrax, right?
And there were guys who had.
And those guys would be the ones that you'd suspect of this, right?
So the FBI at this point in time, they move to focusing.
And it's one of those things.
It's eventually made public that he's no longer being looked at.
But they never like to be as to do the thing they should do, which you should.
make a full court press to be like, we fucked up, we're sorry, right? That does not happen.
But the FBI does stop looking at him. And they do, they eventually find another guy, a senior
microbiologist at Usamred named Bruce Edward Ivans. Ivans is an anthrax expert.
Anthrax was his specialty, right? He had actually consulted with the FBI when they started
the investigation. And he's not someone that they had looked into previously. But now they
start doing the same things to him that they did to Hatfield, right?
They're bumper locking him.
They're following him.
They're telling him that he murdered people, right?
He loses his job.
And he doesn't have either, you know, I don't know if it's just his mental state.
He's not as mentally stable as Hatfield or he just doesn't have the support network.
But in July of 2008, he checks himself into a psychiatric clinic for treatment of depression
and anxiety.
And then once he gets out, he takes a fatal dose of Tylenol and kills himself.
He dies at 62.
Right?
Now, if you ask the FBI today, Ivan's did it, right?
That's their conclusion.
He killed himself because they were getting too close.
He must have been the guy, right?
Maybe.
That's a lot of fucking Tylenol.
Maybe he's the guy.
We don't actually know.
And this is where I have to tell you,
we don't know who did the anthrax attacks.
Ivan's is the most likely name out there.
But there's some reason, there's significant reason to doubt that it was him.
You're just saying like maybe the mental strain of like being followed and fucked with like that.
Yes.
Yeah.
And I'm also kind of insinuating maybe that was the FBI's goal with Hatfield.
Maybe they cared.
They didn't care so much.
Did he do it?
But like if he kills himself while we're investigating him, we can say we got him.
obviously he was the guy
an innocent man wouldn't kill himself
case closed we're heroes
how do these people sleep at night
I think that's kind of what the FBI
was thinking with Hatfield
and I think they got their way with Ivan's
maybe he did do it again
there's a good chance he did
because it had to have been a guy like him
right there's not a lot of guys it could have been
however the National Academy of Science
has since determined that it is not possible
to because the reason
they think it's Ivan's is they
basically trace back
the specific type of aim strain to a jar of anthrax that he made, right?
So the FBI is saying, we know the anthrax that killed those people was anthrax that Ivan's made,
right?
But in the years since they made that claim, the National Academy of Science has come out
and with actual serious scientific data said, it's impossible to do that.
Like, it's physically impossible to trace back the origin of an anthrax sample like
the one that was collected from the letters the way that they're claiming they do and tie it to
Ivan's, which doesn't mean he didn't do it, right? Again, he did have access to anthrax.
There are a number of reasons that he may have done it. I'm very much smoothing out his case.
There's a good chance it was him. But the current conclusion of the scientific community is we
don't really know. Maybe it was this guy, but the FBI way oversold the degree of certainty
that they had that it was this guy, right?
There were probably other people that had access to it too.
There were some. And again, maybe.
it was Ivan's, I don't know. The theory with Ivan's is that, again, his program had suffered
budget cuts and he wanted there to be an anthrax attack so that they'd get more money, which they
did, right? And that may be why whoever did it did it, right? Like, ultimately, but we just don't
know who it was. And the investigation was so fucking botched from the jump that we'll never
know. And, you know, one of the things we got out of this whole balance, I don't know where
Stephen Hatfield would have wound up politically if this hadn't happened.
But I'll say this, he's not a happier, healthier man because this all happened to him.
No.
Right?
No.
You know, this didn't make him better.
It wouldn't make me better.
Anyway, that's the story.
How do you feel about the FBI?
I feel like I was terrorized by the government a little bit.
Jesus Christ.
It's so funny seeing Cash.
Again, this all continues, because like the FBI.
under Cash Patel was desperate to like get this guy after Charlie Kirk got shot was desperate to like be the like like solve it right to to have it to the point that this suit the second they took a guy into custody cash Patel announced the director of the FBI announced we've got the guy we have the man who killed Charlie Kirk and then like an hour later is to be like no it totally wasn't that guy
and their names got out several several different people they did several people do you think they got the right guy oh yes yes because he confessed to his
dad who turned him in right right right like we're pretty sure it's him but it had nothing the
FBI didn't do shit right yeah like his dad was the one who did this saw this caper I mean
there's more to it than that I hope somebody told that poor guy who's like still analyzing his
handwriting yeah yeah somebody's fucking look at his fucking handwriting on the bullets
oh man um Courtney got some pluggables to plug hey y'all I am recording
the audio book of my debut memoir, Girl Gone Wild.
And it's fucking good.
I was worried for a second.
But as I was reading it, I was like, this slaps.
So anyway, get yourself a copy.
Hell yeah.
Get yourself a copy of Courtney's book, which slaps.
And then slap yourself?
I don't know.
Maybe don't do that.
But I don't care what you do.
Do anything, you know?
Not anything.
Don't do any of the things that we talked about in this week of episodes.
No.
For sure.
Call your nice relatives.
if you want.
Call a relative that you care about
and talk to them about something
that has nothing to do with the internet.
You know what?
Everyone go do that right now
and also buy Courtney's book.
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Hey, it's Karen and Georgia,
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We're about to podcast
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Watch this.
We have to think of something
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Listen to my favorite murder on the IHeart
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On this podcast, InCells,
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I am a loser. If I was a woman,
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the iHeart True Crime Plus channel today, available exclusively on Apple Podcasts.
On a cold January day in 1995, 18-year-old Krista Pike killed 19-year-old Colleen Slimmer
in the woods of Knoxville, Tennessee. Since her conviction, Krista has been sitting on
death row. How does someone prove that they deserve to live?
We are starting the recording now. Please state your first and last name.
Krista Pike. Listen to Unrestorable Season 2, Proof of Life, on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Sacred Scandal is back, the hit true crime podcast that uncovers hidden truths and shattered
faith. For 19 years, Elena Sada was a
None for the Legion of Christ.
This season, she's telling her story.
When I first joined the Legion of Christ, I felt chosen.
I was 19 years old when Marcian Masel, the leader of the Legionaries, look me in the eye
and told me I had a calling.
Surviving meant hiding.
Escaping took courage, risking everything to tell her truth.
Listen to Sacred Scandal, the many secrets of Marcial Masiel on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Thank you.
