Casefile True Crime - Introducing Aftermath: Hunt for The Anthrax Killer
Episode Date: April 17, 2025Episode 1: Isolated Incident. Right after 9/11, the FBI scrambles to stop a second-wave attack using a deadly toxin. When a Florida photo editor is poisoned by a rare bacteria, agents uncover a possib...le al-Qaeda plot to spread anthrax from the air. But are they already too late?Check out Aftermath: Hunt for the Anthrax Killer everywhere you get your podcasts. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Weeks after 9-11, a second wave of terror struck the US, but this time the weapon was
invisible.
Anthrax-laced letters sent the nation into panic, shutting down government buildings
and overwhelming law enforcement.
The FBI launched one of the largest investigations in its history, unraveling a complex web of
scientific clues, human error, and personal
cost.
The gripping new podcast series, Aftermath Hunt for the Anthrax Killer, takes you deep
inside the case, from the science that cracked it, to the mistakes that nearly derailed it.
With exclusive access to declassified materials and first-hand accounts, this eight-part
series from Wolf Entertainment, CBC Podcasts and USG Audio reveals how the attacks reshaped America,
and the hidden consequences that still linger today. Now stay tuned for a sneak peek of episode 1. World Trade Center, both towers gone. There are survivors trapped in that rubble, Mayor
Giuliani.
Now it's obvious, I think. I think we have a terrorist act of proportions that we cannot
begin to imagine at this juncture.
It was the evening of September 11th, about 12 hours after the terrorist attacks, and
Scott Decker, a special agent with the FBI, was already on the move.
He packed his bags and said goodbye to his family in Virginia.
I was told to grab four of the guys, load up our Suburbans with evidence collection equipment,
hazmat, gear, Tyvek suits, masks, gloves.
We loaded up the trucks that evening, oh dark 30. September 12, we started heading up to New York.
I think five black Suburbans in a row.
While everyone else was trying like hell
to get out of New York City,
Decker drove all night to get in.
As we went through Maryland, we went through Delaware
on Route 95, the main corridor.
We got to the Delaware Memorial Bridge
and big alert sign above the traffic.
And usually the letters are in yellow, but in my memory it was orange.
I don't know why, but I remember orange.
And it just said in bold letters, New York City closed.
They arrived outside Manhattan near dawn, but those orange letters were right.
New York City was closed.
Even to the FBI, bridges were shut down, landlines were out, and cell phones weren't working
well.
So Decker went to an FBI field office in New Jersey, just across the river.
I saw a Black Hawk helicopter sitting on the grass between the office and the Passaic River.
And I said, yeah, I need a lift over to New York.
So he said, jump in.
And we flew over Manhattan and we flew over Ground Zero.
Doors opened on the Black Hawk.
And as we flew over through the smoke, we just looked down and it was just ashes.
Buildings were in ashes.
They were just big piles on the ground.
He landed near ground zero,
and like everyone there,
struggled to make sense of what had just happened.
The morning of the 12th September,
things were a little up in the air.
I don't think any of us knew what to really expect.
But Decker isn't looking at the scene the same way as most first responders.
In fact, he's there for something else.
What the public didn't know at the time is that there was another looming threat.
We expected a secondary attack.
There was rumors of a biological attack.
The country took steps to get ready for it, unbeknownst to the public.
There was reliable intelligence from the weeks right before 9-11 that Al-Qaeda was planning a
different kind of attack in addition to September 11th, one involving the release of biotoxins into
the air. A second attack was going to be coming at any moment.
Decker was part of the FBI's new hazardous response team.
So while everyone else was looking at the wreckage,
he was on high alert,
searching for signs like unusual illnesses
that this second attack, this time biological,
was already underway.
What no one knew at the time
is that they were looking in the wrong city.
is that they were looking in the wrong city.
The Florida man has contracted a very rare and potentially deadly form of anthrax.
As all Americans know, recent weeks have brought
a second wave of terrorist attacks upon our country.
The deadly bacteria have now turned up
in the American capital.
Deadly anthrax spores sent through the US mail.
One of the most lethal weapons of all time
comes from an almost indestructible bacteria
called anthrax.
And in the fall of 2001,
envelopes laced with powdered anthrax
started showing up in the mail.
The latest letter to have been discovered
is thought to contain literally billions of spores.
Letters sent to NBC and the New York Post were the same.
There's a warning. Take penicillin now.
You cannot stop us. We have this anthrax.
This is anthrax.
Anthrax.
We're anthrax.
Are you afraid?
The anthrax attacks created chaos.
The U.S. Capitol and the Supreme Court were contaminated and shut down.
Thousands of buildings across the country were evacuated.
And innocent people died just from opening their mail.
The U.S. House of Representatives is closing offices today until...
What is perhaps worrying Americans the most is that they still have no idea who is
behind these attacks.
What's weird is that almost 25 years later, most Americans still have no idea who is behind
these attacks.
Anthrax was on the nightly news for months, and then it's like the story just disappeared.
I've talked to hundreds of people about it, and no one, it seems, remembers
what happened with this case. Who mailed those letters? Do you know?
My name's Jeremiah Kroll. I'm a documentary filmmaker, and I was living and working in
New York when all this happened. In those weeks right after 9-11, I remember the stillness
of the streets and the collective sense of raw outrage and sadness in the city.
And then, anthrax. I felt the fear those letters created. The terrifying way they just kept coming, one after another.
Another day of germ warfare and still no sign the worst case of bioterrorism in this country is close to being solved.
Almost two decades later, when the pandemic hit,
I felt that same sense of unpredictable terror in the air.
It reminded me of the anthrax story,
and I wondered, whatever happened with that?
So my team and I started digging into it.
We tracked down people who were involved,
either affected by the attacks
or part of the investigation.
FBI agents, victims, wrongly accused suspects.
And the stories they shared, many for the first time, surprised me.
They painted a picture of these events and their aftermath that revealed how, at its core, this was all so personal. Like stories about investigative mistakes right from the start, about civil liberties
trampled, and about lives destroyed.
They broke the front door and there are agents with Uzi's and moon suits.
It's one of the most devastating things that's ever happened to me.
It'll follow me forever.
I want to look my fellow Americans directly in the eye
and declare to them, I am not the anthrax killer.
And even after all of that,
after the seven year odyssey,
the FBI went on to try to solve this case.
Some people still wonder if the FBI got it right.
I would not consider the case to be closed.
In my mind, it certainly is not solved.
I believe there are others who can be charged with murder.
This is a story about people who have to look at chaos and try to make sense of it while
it's still happening, and how hard it is to get that right.
The worst thing that can happen to an FBI agent working a criminal investigation is
to solve it
in your mind before you really have the evidence.
It's about the stories we tell ourselves
and the price we pay when we tell the wrong ones.
We're gonna go inside one of the largest FBI investigations
in history to figure out why we all lost track of this case
and to explore the aftershocks we still feel today.
From Wolf Entertainment, this is Aftermath,
the hunt for the anthrax killer.
Episode one, isolated incident.
I want to go back to the beginning of this story, to a time when most Americans never gave much thought to face masks or deadly particles in the air.
It's October 2, 2001, three weeks after the attacks of 9-11, and we're in suburban Florida.
It's the middle of the night and a man named Robert Stevens
wakes up feeling sick.
He has chills and a fever.
Robert Stevens is 63.
He's a newspaper photo editor who lives in Lantana, Florida.
That's a coastal town about an hour north of Miami.
He's raised a few kids and is getting close to retirement.
But when he wakes up that night, he feels disoriented, dizzy,
and things seem to be getting worse.
His wife Maureen is worried.
She found him awake in the bathroom,
vomiting over the toilet bowl, confused.
Dr. Larry Bush was chairman of infectious diseases
and chief of staff at the JFK Medical Center
in West Palm Beach,
the hospital closest to Robert and Maureen Stevens' house.
She drove him to the hospital.
He walked into JFK Emergency Room at around 2 in the morning,
and after they put him on a ventilator and got a chest radiograph,
they sent him for a spinal fluid examination looking for bacteria.
Robert's condition gets worse. He goes into a coma.
Larry and his team suspect that he has meningitis, an infection that makes the brain swell.
So he looks at Robert's spinal fluid.
When I look at the microscope, I'm looking to see if I can see what type of bacteria
this is because that's important for how I'm going to treat them.
In a healthy patient, Larry shouldn't see much of anything. You're lucky if you can see one or two bacteria that help you determine what
type of bacterial processes may be. His was overwhelming. I saw an overwhelming
amount of pus cells. That's a bad sign. That means there's
havoc going on in your nervous system. These bacteria suggest a cause of infection that
shocks Larry. They almost never ever cause spinal fluid infection, meningitis. But one does, anthrax.
Larry can't get his head around this. Most of us are now familiar with anthrax largely because of this case, but back then,
in 2001, this was nuts. Most people didn't think about anthrax at all. And for doctors,
it was something you read about in textbooks, not something you expected to see in a patient.
There were a lot of things going through my mind. There's nothing else that explains it.
But it just doesn't make sense. Anthrax is a natural bacteria
that usually only infects livestock.
Cattle tend to catch it in dry rural areas.
They eat or breathe in anthrax cells,
called spores, while they're grazing.
So it's not like a guy in suburban Florida
is gonna just accidentally breathe this stuff in
while going about his life.
And if he did somehow,
he'd be the first person in the entire US
in almost 25 years.
And that person had gotten it from inhaling anthrax spores
off of wool shipped over from Pakistan.
Larry runs more tests.
He had an overwhelming amount of bacteria,
but what struck me was the shape
and the color of these bacteria.
He sees tiny blue stained bacterial rectangles all in a line.
Imagine looking down on a train from high in the air.
I'm an infectious disease person.
I lecture, I write on infectious diseases.
I look at bacteria under a microscope every day.
I knew what I was looking at.
In retrospect, now knowing how everything would play out, this is the moment that it all began.
Right here, for the first time in 25 years,
it seems that someone in America has anthrax in their lungs.
I'm convinced this is anthrax. I don't have a hundred percent proof.
Imagine you're him right now.
You're the chief of staff for the whole hospital, and you're very sure that what you see is
one thing.
But that one thing is so rare and so deadly that when you tell people about it, they'll
either not believe you or panic.
My fear was creating chaos in the hospital. Chaos not just in his hospital, but also likely all of Florida, and probably the nation.
After 9-11, the whole country was bracing for another attack.
Larry's afraid that this could be it.
He can't be the only one exposed.
That's my concern.
My fear was missing bioterrorism and being the person who could blow the whistle.
He has to risk creating that chaos. So he does. Larry calls Dr. Jean Malecki, a friend and
colleague who's the health director for all of Palm Beach County. But she was busy at that moment.
I was giving an actual seminar on bioterrorism at the time the phone
call came in and so we were in the middle of that when my secretary rushed
over to hand me a note from Dr. Bush. So I left the seminar and went to my office
and I got the call from Larry and he said, oh Jean I need to talk to you. He said
make sure your doors closed. Larry tells Gene he thinks Robert Stevens has anthrax.
They both know more tests need to be done to prove it.
So Gene calls up the Centers for Disease Control,
but the CDC pushes back.
They refuse to believe anyone could catch anthrax
in suburban Florida.
I was told by the state of Florida,
the public health laboratory and the CDC, you don't have
enough information.
And I said, wait a minute, I have a potential anthrax event occurring in my backyard here.
I am the chief health officer here and you're telling me not to act on this?
And that's exactly what they were telling me.
And I said, well, too bad, you're getting specimens in the mail.
You will have them within 12 hours.
Despite the CDC's hesitancy
and the testing that still needs to be done,
Larry and Gene have little doubt that it's anthrax.
The real worry on their minds is that this could be
the beginning of another attack by Al-Qaeda.
And what they don't know is that the FBI is worried about another attack too.
The underlying current among government and scientists was a second wave of attack is coming
in a very well likely be a biological or chemical bomb. Anthrax at the top of the
list is a biological threat agent, number one.
FBI Special Agent Scott Decker is one of only a few agents to have investigated nearly the entire case.
And he's got skills that few other FBI agents have,
a PhD in genetics for the postdoc from Harvard.
So that's why he's on the FBI's new hazmat team
that was deployed at ground zero.
We would be there ready to help in case there was a biological attack, a chemical attack,
or even a radiological release.
And one reason they even had Decker and his team on site is because of something odd that
had happened earlier that summer.
In August of 2001, weeks before the Twin Towers fell or anyone got sick in Florida, the FBI
uncovered something in Minnesota. And that discovery would ultimately set the stage for
the entire Anthrax investigation. One of Decker's FBI colleagues was right in the middle of
it.
The two flight instructor whistleblowers from a suburban flight school had called our office to tell
the duty agent that they were very concerned that there was the most suspicious flight
student they had ever come across.
Colleen Rowley was an FBI agent in Minnesota at the time.
He was, first of all, asking questions that would never be asked by a normal flight student
who was trying to actually learn how to fly.
There were things about, you know, communications with the ground, things like that that had
nothing to do with what he said was an ego-boosting trip in order to learn how to fly a 747.
The flight student's name was Zacharias Musawi.
He was a Muslim French national.
When FBI agents interviewed him, they learned his visa had lapsed.
So they had him detained on an immigration violation.
Agents suspected he was up to something, but they couldn't prove it.
And remember, this is all before 9-11.
So he's just one strange guy asking strange questions at a flight school.
They couldn't even get a search warrant for his computer.
Then September 11th happened.
The day of 9-11, we got word from the jail that he was kind of jumping up gleefully when the towers were coming down looking at a television or something.
Now they get the search warrant and search his computer.
The only thing that was eventually found on his laptop was a lot of information television or something. Now they get the search warrant and search his computer.
The only thing that was eventually found on his laptop was a lot of information about wind and wind directions and how to fly like a crop duster,
things like that.
A crop duster?
A crop duster is a small plane used in agriculture to spray pesticides.
He initially says, well, I was involved in other plots, but not the 9-11 one. So if he's
not involved in the 9-11 one and he's in a second wave, he actually kind of admitted
I was going to be a second wave.
What he's saying is that he's a member of Al-Qaeda and that they were planning a second
wave attack. They already know the 9-11 hijackers were studying at flight schools around the United
States.
So now agents worry that Moussaoui was part of a bigger plot still to come.
That he was studying wind direction and crop dusters because he, and maybe the others,
were planning to spray some kind of poison from the air.
With all of this info in mind, President Bush and the Department of Justice take action,
hoping to prevent whatever that second wave might be.
Yesterday, the FBI issued a nationwide alert based on information they received indicating
the possibility of attacks using crop-dusting aircraft.
They ground all crop-dusters across the country.
That solves the immediate problem.
But they still have a larger issue.
Are there other extremist pilots out there
waiting to launch an attack?
Director Mueller and Attorney General Ashcroft
gave press conferences announcing the names
of all 19 hijackers.
The director of the FBI and I just returned
from a memorial service at the National Cathedral and wanted to take
this time to give you a report.
Announcing the names was a call for help to the public.
If you'd seen something, say something.
The FBI requests that anyone who may have information about these individuals immediately
contact an FBI field office or call the toll-free hotline.
And someone did.
They didn't want to learn how to land, they just want to learn how to fly. Willie Lee is a crop dusting pilot
who had an eerily similar story to the one in Minnesota.
Suspicious acting men from the Middle East
asking unusual questions about planes.
You know, that would tip me off right off the bat.
But Willie isn't in Minnesota.
He's halfway across the country
at a different crop dusting business.
He'd been flying crop dusting planes for decades.
On any given day during his regular job,
he'd pack as much as 500 gallons of pesticides
into his Air Tractor 502 crop plane.
He'd fly incredibly low to the ground
to avoid spraying homes and people.
When we fly two or three feet off the ground
whenever we're spraying,
it takes some experience
to do it.
But these men didn't sound like they wanted that experience.
They were asking about tank capacity and flight distances.
It sounded off.
So six weeks before September 11th, Willie called the police.
I told them, I said, these people, something's up there.
I said, these people ask you questions that people don't ask.
But the police didn't do anything about it.
They couldn't really.
No one had done anything illegal.
After 9-11, when Willie saw the names and pictures
of the hijackers on television,
he knew he'd been right to be suspicious
because some of the men who'd visited him
were the same men who flew the
planes into the Twin Towers. In fact, one of them was Mohammed Atta, the chief U.S.
operative who directed the attack. Wale and his team called the FBI. This time, they listened.
So now the FBI has to figure out why were al-Qaeda members in at least two different
places around the country trying to learn how to fly crop dusters?
And then totally separately, there's the question that Dr. Larry Bush is asking.
How does a man in suburban Florida have anthrax?
And these two mysteries are about to collide.
Because the airfield that the 9-11 terrorists
visited, Willie's airfield, it's less than an hour from the hospital where Robert
Stevens is in a coma.
Back in that hospital, Robert Stevens' health is deteriorating and Dr. Bush
still doesn't know for certain what he's dealing with.
Eight o'clock the next morning,
I call Jacksonville Reference Lab,
and I say, what was the result?
And he said to me, I shouldn't tell you that.
I said, wow, that's a bold answer.
I said, well, there's two things with that answer.
I said, first of all, I'm the treating doctor.
I'm taking care of this patient.
I'm responsible for him.
I sent the lab to you. I said, and by you telling I'm the treating doctor. I'm taking care of this patient. I'm responsible for him. I sent the lab to you.
I said, and by you telling me you shouldn't tell me that,
you just told me that.
He said, I gotta go.
I said, where you going?
He says, I have to call the people I work for.
He hung up.
The people he works for are high up on the chain.
In an instant, the CDC calls the National Department
of Health, who calls the White House, who calls the Department of Justice. And now, finally,
the FBI learns anthrax is in Florida. Because of his background and science,
Agent Scott Decker knows an anthrax infection shouldn't have happened in Florida.
So for the FBI who'd been worried for weeks about some kind of biological attack, likely
from the air, maybe involving crop dusters, if this isn't the work of the same 9-11
terrorists, who they now know took flight lessons at an airfield only an hour away,
it's an awful lot of coincidences.
We didn't know if it was an act of terrorism, so that was the first thing we had to do is
prove one way or another.
And in order to do this, prove it's terrorism,
Decker and the FBI need to know
what kind of anthrax this is.
Because anthrax comes in strains like the flu.
And if they can figure out the strain,
that might tell agents where or how Stevens got infected.
He had been up in North Carolina when he got sick visiting his daughter,
and they had gone to a state park. There was a thought that he had got infected up there,
one of the plants or the bad water or something.
FBI agents head to the state park to look for any signs that Stevens could have been infected
in nature. But the scarier scenario is that the anthrax came from a laboratory,
because if it's from a lab, there's a good chance somebody spread it on purpose.
To figure this out, the FBI knows exactly who to turn to.
We agreed to call up Dr. Paul Keim in Arizona, Northern Arizona University. He was the unquestioned expert in the country.
Yeah, so I was doing my normal college professor stuff
at the beginning of a fall semester
here in Flagstaff, Arizona.
And out of the blue, an acquaintance of mine from the FBI
called me up and said,
he said, hey, we have an unusual case of anthrax
down in Florida.
Dr. Paul Keim hoped to find the source of the anthrax in a biological database he'd been creating for decades.
For the last 30 years, I've been involved in trying to develop DNA methods for precisely
identifying strains of dangerous pathogens so that we can identify where they
came from, link them together with outbreaks, and in particular, how they're related to
biological weapons.
So as Robert Stevens is lying in a coma, investigators put a sample of his spinal fluid on a private
jet and fly it halfway across the country directly to Paul.
And so it was like, wow.
It felt like all the blood was leaving my body at that point because it's like,
this isn't an academic exercise anymore.
This is the real thing.
So after I hung up, I quickly went around and found all the anthrax DNA
fingerprinting people.
I told them I expected to have the anthrax back in the lab by about eight o'clock in the evening.
So I said, you know, take care of whatever you need,
but be back here around eight o'clock
and be prepared to start doing the analysis.
A few hours later, Paul gets in his truck
and heads to the small local airport in Flagstaff.
He doesn't know quite what to expect.
The general aviation guy just went and opened up the gate
and let me drive out on the tarmac, you know.
Gulfstreams are pretty impressive, playing.
And so it landed right around sunset.
Then this woman, this blonde woman,
came walking down the stairs with a box.
And as she stepped onto the tarmac,
all I could think about was the movie Casablanca,
where Humphrey Bogart is on the tarmac with you know, all I could think about was the movie Casablanca, where Humphrey Bogart
is on the tarmac with Ingrid Bergman. And I thought, that'd make me Humphrey Bogart.
And then I kind of slapped my face and said, get your head back in the game, you know.
Paul may not be in a Hollywood movie right now, but in a way he is a detective. And in this very
moment, the fate of American biosecurity
is quite literally in his hands.
So he takes that package and drives it back to his lab.
And there he goes into the biosafety suite
and opens the box.
And there's a box, you know, like, I know,
18 inches by 18 inches by 18 inches, a cardboard box.
And inside of it was styrofoam pack
and then a crush proof pack.
And inside that is a vial with the spores found in Robert Stevens' spinal fluid.
When you're looking at it by eye on a culture it's kind of this white creamy stuff.
Kind of like mayonnaise smeared on top of jello.
We knew for sure it was anthrax because it had a DNA fingerprint pattern that was very
consistent with bacillus anthracis.
It's anthrax, 100%.
Once Paul knows that, he needs to figure out what strain it is.
And my laboratory had been developing
DNA fingerprinting methods to identify
the different strains from around the world.
And if it was a laboratory strain,
this wasn't an accident in the wake of 9-11.
Paul and his team work through the night.
By morning, they have an answer.
It was a laboratory strain, you know,
and so how does laboratory strain
end up infecting a gentleman in Florida?
Think about this.
Here's a college science professor, an expert in theoretical bioterrorism.
And now he's seeing right up close anthrax from what appears to be an actual bioterrorist.
Instantly, we knew that this was a biological weapons event because it had to be an intentional
act. And in the wake of 9-11, Al-Qaeda was the number one suspect.
Paul's lab is the only place in the world that now knows the very threat weighing on
Agent Scott Decker and the FBI is the real deal.
At that point, if there were any doubts that this was a bioterrorism event, they were gone.
For the moment, the story hasn't spread to the media. Paul Keim, Scott Decker, and the
FBI have only a short window to try to get answers before the bad news spreads. And they're
all wondering the same thing. Was it the 9-11 hijackers who deployed this anthrax? Jean
Maleky, the health director in Florida, worries about that too.
In Palm Beach County, we use crop testers all the time.
They go up and down all the time, spraying our vegetables and our fruits.
If there was an aerial attack, is it possible the 9-11 hijackers, or people working with
them, had dropped anthrax in an area that included Robert Stevens' backyard?
Is that how it ended up in his system?
Stevens' home was less than a mile from an airstrip, so his house could have easily been
in the path of travel. My focus was to go to the home, to speak to everybody there,
to take samples, to investigate the entire outside of the home, inside the home, to look at potential sources for anthrax.
Gene takes a biohazard crew to scour the property
from top to bottom.
The home itself was a three bedrooms, probably two baths,
license kitchen and living room.
The powder is so fine that if it was sprayed from the sky,
it could be anywhere.
In the backyard, they had lots of plants and lots of trees.
We looked for any type of white powder substances
that could have been in the trees or on the ground.
I remember distinctly bending down and taking samples
off of various bushes that were in the backyard.
On the surface, nothing looks suspicious.
There's no obvious white powder anywhere.
But Jeanne sends samples she's taken to her lab.
She then heads back to the hospital to check on Robert Stevens and discovers...
A deadly disease putting a Lantana man in the hospital.
The story was out.
Mohammed Atta, who was the lead terrorist on board one of the flights that crashed into
the World Trade Center, apparently took flight lessons in Palm Beach County at a flight school just
anthrax can enter the body in three ways it can be swallowed seep through cuts in
the skin and the most deadly way inhale
state and federal health officials hurry to put together press conferences to
address everyone's concerns.
This individual is being cared for by a very well-trained and expert team of physicians
from within the hospital in Palm Beach.
As one of those well-trained physicians, Dr. Larry Bush is called upon to answer some tough
questions.
The difficult part for me in that press conference was, Maureen Stevens was sitting in the front,
and they said to me, is Bob Stevens gonna die?
Larry knows that historically, inhalation anthrax
is likely fatal, but he's conflicted
about sharing the worst case scenario.
But I'm looking at Maureen Stevens,
and I said, well, you know, he's seriously ill,
he's on the right medication,
and we have hope that he could survive.
Meanwhile, the press keep on with their questions.
And the CDC seems entirely focused on hitting the same reassuring note over and over again.
I want to stress two things.
First of all, that this is an isolated case.
And second, that this is not contagious.
This is a very serious illness, but once again, it's an isolated case.
But I do want to stress again.
I want to reiterate, this is an isolated case.
This is an isolated case.
The disease is not contagious.
If the hope was to keep people calm, to reassure the media that the situation was nothing to worry about, It didn't work. The Centers for Disease Control has just confirmed the diagnosis of anthrax in a patient in a
Florida hospital.
There's more media in the area because things are leaking out than you can imagine. The
parking lot is full of every type of media there is.
The chaos Dr. Larry Bush was afraid of is here.
All this coming just a day after the FBI warned Americans
that another terrorist attack could be imminent.
The hospital is going crazy.
People are calling the hospital
and want their loved ones transferred
because we have anthrax in the hospital.
The Florida man has contracted a very rare
and potentially deadly form of anthrax.
The outside of the hospital was one of those things like you see when, you know, somebody's
coming out of a courthouse and everybody's rushing in with a microphone to get some type
of sound bite.
It was, you know, really chaotic.
Everyone is now watching Larry's team closely to understand what this one case of anthrax
might mean for the rest of the world.
And the news he has is not looking good.
Bob Stevens is in the ICU.
He's not doing well.
Robert Stevens' health is failing quickly
and Larry fears the worst.
With the story out in the world, panic is gonna grow.
And the public wouldn't be wrong to worry.
It seems Robert Stevens may be patient zero
of a colossal new attack.
Agent Decker and the FBI now face what could be
the largest bioterror threat in American history.
So the question on their minds is,
if Al-Qaeda does have anthrax,
what will they do with it next?
The worst case is if somebody had succeeded
in making a large amount.
It's possible hundreds could die.
Definitely hundreds, possibly thousands.
But it seems that agents are closing in
on their suspects fast.
The confirmation of a plan for a second wave attack,
the pilots learning about crop dusters,
the airstrip near Steven's house, it's all adding up. The FBI just needs a little hard evidence,
a link that proves who did this so they can stop more deaths.
I get a call to come down and see this woman and I said to the emergency room doctor, you know,
this is getting a little overwhelming. You're calling me for every cough that's walking in there.
I said, why this one? They said, this woman's got an interesting story.
But of course, it's not going to be that easy. The information they're about to get will
send the FBI down a rabbit hole of false suspects, shocking twists, and damning revelations,
including a liar in their midst.
This season on Aftermath, the hunt for the anthrax killer.
No witnesses, no fingerprints, no personal DNA.
And then there's another case, and then another, and another.
There was such enthusiasm over a conspiracy theory that had no basis.
I felt betrayed.
American and coalition forces are in the
early stages of military operations to disarm Iraq. Saddam Hussein could have
produced 25,000 liters of this deadly material. Do you think they're gonna
submit evidence that implicates them? This is United States. Half of the FBI
field office from Washington is at your home. This is not a joke. What is
everybody? A dead man walking?
Be sure to follow Aftermath Hunt for the Anthrax Killer, available now wherever you get your podcasts.