Curtis
Washington:
A letter possibly laced with the deadly poison ricin was found at a US airbase Tuesday as a man charged with sending a similar letter to the White House was released on bond, officials said.
The letter discovered at Bolling Air Force Base outside of Washington comes a week after three others were intercepted on their way to President Barack Obama, a US senator and a Mississippi official.
"We've had another incident today I'm told at Bolling Air Force Base, the same substance," Senator Harry Reid told reporters.
Paul Kevin Curtis, 45, was arrested by the FBI at his home in Corinth, Mississippi last week and charged with threatening the life of the president.
His lawyer insisted Tuesday that they found the wrong man, noting that the FBI could find "nothing" in Curtis's home or on his computer to link him to the letters.
"We have maintained from the beginning ... that Kevin Curtis is absolutely 100 percent innocent," Christi McCoy told CNN.
"The case has not been dismissed, but obviously we feel better about it than we did this time yesterday."
The poisoned letters found last week came as the nation was already on edge after a deadly bombing at the Boston Marathon. The FBI has said there was no indication the two cases were linked.
A spokesman for the US Marshals Service did not immediately return a request for comment to confirm that Curtis was released.
The FBI said last week that Curtis was "believed to be responsible for the mailings of the three letters sent through the US Postal Service" that contained "a granular substance that preliminarily tested positive for ricin."
The letters were addressed to Obama, Republican Senator Roger Wicker of Mississippi and a justice of the peace in the same US state, Sadie Holland.
The three notes all referred to "missing Pieces" and were signed "KC," which matched other letters sent to government officials that investigators suspect all trace back to Curtis, according to court documents.
Curtis also wrote about an alleged black market for the illegal sale of human body parts that he thought was being covered up by the government, prosecutors said.
In 2007, Curtis's ex-wife reported to police that her former spouse was extremely delusional and believed the government was spying on him with drones.
The letter discovered at Bolling Air Force Base outside of Washington comes a week after three others were intercepted on their way to President Barack Obama, a US senator and a Mississippi official.
"We've had another incident today I'm told at Bolling Air Force Base, the same substance," Senator Harry Reid told reporters.
Paul Kevin Curtis, 45, was arrested by the FBI at his home in Corinth, Mississippi last week and charged with threatening the life of the president.
His lawyer insisted Tuesday that they found the wrong man, noting that the FBI could find "nothing" in Curtis's home or on his computer to link him to the letters.
"We have maintained from the beginning ... that Kevin Curtis is absolutely 100 percent innocent," Christi McCoy told CNN.
"The case has not been dismissed, but obviously we feel better about it than we did this time yesterday."
The poisoned letters found last week came as the nation was already on edge after a deadly bombing at the Boston Marathon. The FBI has said there was no indication the two cases were linked.
A spokesman for the US Marshals Service did not immediately return a request for comment to confirm that Curtis was released.
The FBI said last week that Curtis was "believed to be responsible for the mailings of the three letters sent through the US Postal Service" that contained "a granular substance that preliminarily tested positive for ricin."
The letters were addressed to Obama, Republican Senator Roger Wicker of Mississippi and a justice of the peace in the same US state, Sadie Holland.
The three notes all referred to "missing Pieces" and were signed "KC," which matched other letters sent to government officials that investigators suspect all trace back to Curtis, according to court documents.
Curtis also wrote about an alleged black market for the illegal sale of human body parts that he thought was being covered up by the government, prosecutors said.
In 2007, Curtis's ex-wife reported to police that her former spouse was extremely delusional and believed the government was spying on him with drones.
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