LIEBERMAN
SEEKS INFORMATION ABOUT SUSPICIOUS LETTER
WERE PROPER USPS PROCEDURES FOLLOWED?
Friday,
December 6, 2002
WASHINGTON - Senate Governmental Affairs Committee
Chairman Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., is seeking information about an
incident involving a suspicious letter found at a Hartford
postal facility. The letter, discovered last month, contained a
notation that referred to anthrax.
And yet, questions have arisen concerning the postal
service’s handling of the letter.
Attached is a copy of Lieberman’s letter to Postmaster
General John Potter.
December 2, 2002
The
Honorable John E. Potter
Postmaster General
United States Postal Service
475 L’Enfant Plaza SW
Washington, DC 20260
Dear Mr.
Potter:
I have been contacted by Michael Berghuis, President of
the American Postal Workers Union, Hartford CT Local 147.
Mr. Berghuis informed me that, on November 19, 2002 a
suspicious letter was discovered in the Hartford Processing and
Distribution facility by a postal worker, with the following
message: "To anyone who wants anthrax have a nice
day." Information provided by Mr. Berghuis, including the
minutes of a United States Postal Service (USPS)
"After-Action Review" meeting, dated November 20,
2002, indicates that USPS procedures for handling suspicious
mail may not have been followed in handling this incident.
In particular, it appears that the suspicious letter may
have been transported by hand through the facility, which could
have exposed postal employees to contamination.
It is troubling to me that postal workers and others
might have been placed at risk as a result of this incident.
Please provide by December 16, 2002 an accounting of what
occurred, including your response to the following questions:
•
What are the USPS protocols for handling suspicious mail?
•
Are postal supervisors and employees trained in these
protocols?
•
Were these protocols followed on November 19 in the
Hartford mail processing facility, and if not, why not?
•
If these protocols were not followed, what action has the
USPS taken regarding this breach?
What steps will the USPS take in the future to ensure
that such events are properly handled?
This matter is of serious concern, especially in the wake
of the discovery of anthrax in the Wallingford facility and the
ongoing GAO investigation regarding the handling of that
incident by the USPS and others.
I look forward to your response on this latest event.
Sincerely,
Joseph I. Lieberman
Chairman
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