09.07.10

Ricin Kooks (an infrequent series)

Posted in Bioterrorism, Ricin Kooks at 8:23 am by George Smith

Ricin is a poison. Since 9/11, the now turned parasitic US bioterror defense industry, which runs on taxpayer dollars, has worked hard to convince that it’s a horrible threat in the hands of terrorists.

It’s not. And while nuts from the neo-Nazi survivalist right to the occasional jihadist have always attempted to grind castor seeds to powder, no one except the Bulgarian agency that killed dissident Georgi Markov back in the 1978 has ever wielded it successfully as a weapon.

Ricin, while very toxic, simply isn’t quite poisonous enough. And it isn’t a cake walk to purify it from castor seeds, although making castor mash is a fairly common activity.

DD has written about this at length previously. Just see the “Ricin Kooks” tab at right.

Historically, the only people in the US who fiddle with castor seeds are nuts from the extreme right fringe — neo-Nazis and those endeavoring to turn their living rooms into bunkers lest the tyrannical government come for them — to those harboring the impulse to destroy their spouses.

Two recent cases in the news, the first from Everett, WA, where a man named Jeffrey Marble had it in for his wife. He beat her with a barbell and was convicted and sent over on that charge.

His wife survived:

A jury on Wednesday quickly convicted an Everett man in the barbell beating of his wife last year.

A Sept. 8 sentencing date was set for Jeffery C. Marble, 49. He faces a standard sentencing range of 11 to nearly 14 years in prison, prosecutors said.

Federal agents weren’t far behind after ricin was found in the home and tests later showed the woman had been exposed to the toxin.

That information didn’t reach jurors. Any testimony about the ricin would have been too prejudicial to the defendant, who was on trial for an assault, Superior Court Judge Gerald Knight ruled earlier in the trial.

It’s against federal law to possess or manufacture ricin. FBI agents and federal prosecutors continue to investigate.

“It’s still pending with the FBI and U.S. Attorney’s Office,” Shapiro said.

Marble allegedly told police he’d looked up recipes to turn castor seeds into ricin. He used a mortar and pestle to grind up the seeds in the family home but denied using it on his wife, according to court papers.

Marble told investigators he used the seeds to poison mountain beavers and moles, but it didn’t seem to be working.

Another case involves the typical perpetrator, this time from a suburb of Chicago. Edward Bachner will eventually be sent over for buying up purified tetrodotoxin, a nerve poison extracted from puffer fish.

This, also in a case seemingly aimed at poisoning his wife, coupled with the white kook’s fetish for accumulating weapons — including castor powder.

One reads:

The FBI arrested Bachner June 30, 2008, after he arrived at a UPS Store to pick up vials of TTX he had ordered from a company in New Jersey. Authorities said a search of his home on the 5700 block of McKenzie Drive later uncovered 45 full or partially full vials of the poison along with evidence he had obtained at least 19 more vials that were missing. Agents also found a handgun, more than 50 knives, five garrotes, a phony CIA badge, a precursor to the poison Ricin and books on how to poison people, make gun silencers and hand-to-hand combat, a federal prosecutor said. Bachner also faces charges he tried over the Internet to hire someone to kill his wife in 2005. Authorities questioned Bachner about that incident in 2006, but did not press charges at the time.

Ricin will never be used as a WMD. While there may be wishful thinking in this matter, it just isn’t going to happen. Science, history and precedent don’t support the conclusion. The castor plant has co-existed with man for a long time, not only as a renewable crop but also as a decorative ornament.

People who have castor plants don’t have WMDs in the garden. And castor oil pressing plants aren’t biochemical weapons depots.

Nevertheless, the US government sends taxpayer money to a small portion of the bioterror defense industry every year — for the purpose of defense against ricin.

Most of it goes to a virtually valueless company known as Soligenix, part of the infamous Alliance for Biosecurity.

Soligenix, which used to known as DOR Biopharma — the name change presumably made to camouflage it from potential investors — has been working on a ricin vaccine ever since 9/11.

And it regularly tries to pump its worth by issuing press releases on its products, which have never quite made it to market.

Indeed, the only people who actually may need a ricin vaccine are those who do research on ricin. And — perhaps — the US kooks who try to make it, along with anyone in their households.

From a recent Soligenix press release:

There are currently no effective means to prevent the effects of ricin intoxication. The successful development of an effective vaccine against ricin toxin may act as a deterrent against the actual use of ricin as a biological weapon and could be used in rapid deployment scenarios in the event of a biological attack. RiVax™ would potentially be added to the Strategic National Stockpile and dispensed in the event of a terrorist attack.

Think of it as a type of scientific corporate welfare work for the few and privileged. Perhaps the company will go out of business some day. But don’t bet on it.

3 Comments

  1. blog said,

    September 7, 2010 at 10:00 am

    Ricin Kooks…

    Ricin is a poison found in castor seeds. Since 9/11, the now turned parasitic US bioterror defense industry, which sucks on taxpayer dollars, has worked hard to convince that it’s a horrible threat in the hands of terrorists. It’s not. And while nuts…

  2. John Robertson said,

    September 8, 2010 at 10:06 am

    Coming up with a vaccine against ricin is really very clever. There is never going to be widespread ricin poisoning so your vaccine can be shown to work.

    A man in Times Square wore a 4ft high tophat. He was asked why he was wearing it. ‘To keep the elephants away’. ‘But there are no elephants in Times Square’. ‘You see, it works!’

    I once had a discussion with a civilian worker in the American embassy in London who said they had been given a security briefing about the threat of ricin.

    I find myself thinking that the security services are happy for people to think ricin is a real threat so that the ‘amateur’ terrorists will waste their time with it rather than getting something which could be nasty. It has to be that because the only other explanation is that they are really dumb.

    Here in the UK, there’s a murder enquiry after the body of a naked man who worked for MI6 was found in a sports bag in his own apartment. Of course, the press are making a big thing of his employment and, surprise, today one newspaper said the police suspected ricin.

  3. George Smith said,

    September 8, 2010 at 10:30 am

    I’ve been seeing some of these MI6 things in my news ticker.