Suspicious powder sent intentionally
Deepa Bharath
A suspicious substance that alarmed an office complex in Santa Ana
Heights on Saturday morning and turned out to be chalk was
intentionally mailed to someone in the building, fire officials said
Tuesday.
The powder came to its recipient in a greeting card “with
obscenities written on it,” said Jerry Strom, Newport Beach Fire
battalion chief.
The envelope, delivered to an office in the 20100 block of Birch
Street, caused a stir after the person it was addressed to saw the
powdery substance and called authorities.
“The powder was discolored because of the ink on the greeting
card,” Strom said. “The incident is under investigation because there
seems to have been some history between the sender and recipient of
the card.”
United States Postal Service officials as well as the FBI are
looking into the case, he said.
“It certainly seems like the sender of the envelope deliberately
put the powder in there to scare the other person,” Strom said.
The person who sent out the powder will face prosecution by
federal authorities if investigators confirm his or her motive, he
said.
Saturday’s was the third incident involving a suspicious substance
in Newport-Mesa in two weeks.
Nearly 60 people were evacuated from the Department of Motor
Vehicles building on West 19th Street in Costa Mesa after a clerk
opened mail containing a suspicious grainy substance. Officials later
found out that it was some type of packing material that was mailed
in with DMV renewal papers by accident.
Also, on Feb. 4, 80 employees were evacuated from the Fairview
Developmental Center in Costa Mesa after someone found a gray powdery
substance in envelopes. That powder turned out to be “sacred ash”
brought in by an employee who smeared it on her forehead as part of a
religious ritual.
Both those incidents happened days after a letter laced with ricin
powder, a poison, made its way to Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist’s
office in the Capitol building in Washington, D.C. on Feb. 2.
The local incidents were most likely a coincidence, Strom said.
“But we’re taking all incidents seriously,” he said.
These incidents do put an enormous strain on the cities’
resources, officials said.
One such incident requires the presence of three or four fire
engines, paramedics, the Orange County Fire Authority’s Hazardous
Materials team, Orange County Health Agency officials, postal and
other federal investigators and the California Highway Patrol, which
deals with state-run facilities such as the DMV and the Fairview
Developmental Center.
“A call like this could cost, on an average, between $12,000 to
$15,000,” said Gregg Steward, Costa Mesa Fire deputy chief.
Usually, the building owners or the person responsible for the act
pays that expense, he said.
“Accidents do happen,” he said. “But, in this day and age, people
should be more cautious about what they send in the mail.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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