-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Gritzle70
Sent: Sunday, December 17, 2006 12:47 AM
 Subject: Fwd: Senator Who Suffered Stroke Supported Anthrax Investigation

Well, I guess we know now why he suffered the stroke and who gave him the
stroke

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:



Senator Who Suffered Stroke Supported Anthrax Investigation
Argus Leader | December 13, 2006
<http://www.argusleader.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061213/NEWS02/61213
0303/1001/NEWS>
Kevin Dobbs
Note: The following report was published before it was announced today that
Senator Johnson had suffered a stroke.
A cadre of U.S. lawmakers fired off a letter to Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales pleading for new information on the five-years-and-running
investigation into the 2001 anthrax scare that shocked South Dakota when
then-Sen. Tom Daschle's office was caught up in the attacks.
The bipartisan letter, signed by 33 members of Congress this week, extends
an effort by Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, and Rep. Rush Holt, D-N.J., to
persuade the FBI to release an update on the case.
"In one of the most important terrorism investigations ever undertaken by
the FBI, it is unbelievable to me that members of Congress, some who were
targets of the anthrax attacks, haven't been briefed for years," Grassley
said.
The FBI, citing concern about information in the unsolved case being leaked
to the public, has refused lawmakers' requests.
Grassley and the other lawmakers said in the letter that leaked information
is a valid concern, but they maintained it does not justify keeping
lawmakers in the dark. They said they need the information to perform their
required oversight of the FBI's performance.
Congress "cannot be cut-off from detailed information about the conduct of
one of the largest investigations in FBI history," the lawmakers wrote to
Gonzales. "That information is vital in order to fulfill its Constitutional
responsibility to conduct oversight of the Executive Branch."
South Dakota's congressional delegation did not sign the letter, but Sens.
Tim Johnson and John Thune said they support their colleagues' request.
"After five years, the FBI should be able to pass on some information to
Congress on the progress they have made in finding the terrorists
responsible for this attack," Johnson said Tuesday. "This kind of
bi-partisan demand for checks and balances should not be ignored, and will
hopefully move the investigation into this case forward."
The attacks - linked to the deaths of five people in the wake of the Sept.
11, 2001, terror attacks on Washington and New York - brought terrorism to
the door of South Dakotans when, in October 2001, anthrax arrived in a
sealed envelope at Daschle's office in the Hart Building in Washington. It
came with a message that said "you die now."
Daschle said earlier this year the FBI had denied several of his requests to
be briefed on the status of the investigations.
In his recent book, "Like No Other Time," Daschle said he felt helpless in
the immediate weeks after the anthrax attacks, but he also wrote that he had
"made peace of mind with this kind of threat."
FBI agents continue to work the case, and lawmakers say it is time they are
brought into the fold to assess whether federal investigators are doing
their jobs effectively.
"While I understand the need for caution given the ongoing criminal
investigation, Congress has the right to conduct oversight and the FBI
should be more forthcoming with this case," Thune said Tuesday.
Wire services contributed to this report.

http://batr.net/neoconwatch/ <http://neocon-watch.blogspot.com/>

9/11 Truth: False Flags & Low Intensity Operations
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_84-PT-REc4


People Get Ready

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vKqtdNxOs00&mode=related&search
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vKqtdNxOs00&mode=related&search> =


Michel Chossudovsky - The Truth Behind 911

http://www.ourmedia.org/node/139137




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