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Elvis impersonator charged in connection with ricin mail scare

The Elvis impersonator suspected of sending ricin-laden letters to President Barack Obama, Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississippi and a Mississippi judge has been cha...
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(CNN) — The Elvis impersonator suspected of sending ricin-laden letters to President Barack Obama, Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississippi and a Mississippi judge has been charged with sending a threat to the president, the Department of Justice said Thursday.

Read more- the charges have been dropped.

Paul Kevin Curtis, 45, of Corinth, Mississippi, has been arrested on a criminal complaint charging him with “knowingly depositing for conveyance in the mail and for delivery from any post office any letter, paper, writing or document containing threats to take the life of or to inflict bodily harm upon the President of the United States.”

The federal complaint further charges him with sending “communications addressed to other persons, and containing a threat to injure the person of others.”

Curtis was to appear Thursday in U.S. District Court in Oxford, Mississippi.

An affidavit in support of the criminal complaint cites the mailing of envelopes containing typewritten letters and “a suspicious granular substance” to Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Mississippi, the president and Sadie Holland, a Justice Court judge in Lee County, Mississippi.

According to the department, all three letters were typed on yellow paper and read as follows:

“No one wanted to listen to me before.

There are still ‘Missing Pieces’

Maybe I have your attention now

Even if that means someone must die.

This must stop.

To see a wrong and not expose it,

is to become a silent partner to its continuance

I am KC and I approve this message”

The letter addressed to Wicker and bearing no return address was intercepted by the U.S. Senate Mail Facility in Landover, Maryland, and the FBI was alerted of it Tuesday, the affidavit says.

Three of four field tests conducted on the powder inside the envelope addressed to Wicker tested positive for a protein that later tests determined to be ricin, a lethal toxin, it says. A fourth test proved inconclusive.

Capitol Police learned from Wicker’s staff that Curtis had sent similar messages to the senator and that Curtis had posted on his blog in 2010 that he was writing a novel about black-market body parts titled “Missing Pieces,” the affidavit says.

Letters to Obama and Holland also cited the book, it adds.

A similar letter — bearing no return address and postmarked April 8 — was sent to Holland at her office in Tupelo. It too contained a “suspicious granular substance” that has yet to be tested, the affidavit says.

A similar substance found Tuesday in an envelope addressed to Obama tested positive for ricin in a field test, it says.

The three letters all contained “the same verbiage, font, style and paper color,” it says.

The letters were postmarked Memphis, Tennessee, which is typically the postmark that letters mailed from northern Mississippi bear, it says.

On his Facebook page, Curtis posted the same quote: “To see a wrong and not expose it, is to become a silent partner in its continuance,” the affidavit says.

Sgt. Corrie Robbins of the Booneville Police Department in Mississippi told investigators that Curtis had been investigated several times since 2007, the affidavit says. It adds that Curtis’ ex-wife reported to police in 2007 that he was “extremely delusional, anti-government, and felt the government was spying on him with drones.”

If convicted, Curtis will face a maximum of 15 years in prison, $500,000 in fines and three years of supervised release.

Wicker said Thursday that he met Curtis about a decade ago. “He’s an entertainer,” the senator said. “He’s an Elvis impersonator, and he entertained at a party that my wife and I helped give for a young couple that was getting married. He was quite entertaining.”

The Clarion-Ledger of Jackson, Mississippi, posted photographs of a man it identified as Curtis. In one photograph, he is shown under an “Elvis” sign holding a microphone as he appears to be singing. He is wearing a white suit and sporting long sideburns and swept-back hair.

A Kevin Curtis Live Facebook page describes him a “Master of Impressions performing ‘Tribute to the Stars’ for audiences of all ages!”

The FBI arrested him on Wednesday in connection with the case at his home in Corinth, Mississippi.

Letters put focus on Texas chiropractor’s words

The line in the letters about exposing “a wrong” comes from John Raymond Baker, a longtime Texas chiropractor, his wife said. It’s been widely quoted online, but Tammy Baker sounded surprised that it was used in the letters under scrutiny in Washington.

When contacted by CNN, she said that she was not aware of the letters and that the phrase refers to her husband’s general philosophy of care.

She said their office phone rang frequently Wednesday afternoon, which was “kind of freaking out our other employee.”

A 2006 post on a blog for Baker’s office said the comment originally was a criticism of insurance companies. Since then, the site said, it “has been a quote that has been picked up and quoted (sometimes without attribution) around the net” and “people are using it about all kinds of injustices.”

Mail for members of Congress and the White House has been handled at off-site postal facilities since the 2001 anthrax attacks, which targeted Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vermont, and then-Majority Leader Tom Daschle, D-South Dakota.

On heightened alert

White House spokesman Jay Carney said the president had been briefed on the letters.

“Obviously, he understands and we all understand that there are procedures in place, as the FBI has said. There are, there is a process in place that ensures that materials that are suspicious, or substances that are found to be suspicious at remote locations, are then sent for secondary and more intense testing, and that process is under way now,” he said.

Suspicious letters in Michigan and Arizona, too

Investigators are trying to determine whether suspicious letters found at Senate offices elsewhere in the country came from the same source, federal law enforcement sources said.

Sen. Carl Levin, D-Michigan, said one of his home-state offices received a “suspicious-looking” letter and alerted authorities. “We do not know yet if the mail presented a threat,” said Levin, the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee.

A staffer for Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake flagged “suspicious letters” at the freshman Republican’s Phoenix office, Flake spokeswoman Genevieve Rozansky said in a statement, but “no dangerous material was detected in the letters.”

Phoenix Fire Department spokesman Jonathan Jacobs said the envelope contained a powder. The person who found the envelope was being treated at a Phoenix-area hospital for a pre-existing condition and stress from the event, and others in the immediate vicinity were examined as well.

In a statement issued Wednesday, the FBI said it has no indication of a connection between the letters and Monday’s bombings at the finish line of the Boston Marathon.

Ricin is easily made

Ricin is a toxic substance that can be produced easily and cheaply. As little as 500 micrograms, an amount the size of the head of a pin, can kill an adult. There is no test for exposure and no antidote.

Experts say it is more effective for use against individuals than as a weapon of mass destruction.

Ricin was used in the 1978 assassination of Bulgarian dissident Georgi Markov. The author, who had defected nine years earlier, was jabbed by the tip of an umbrella while awaiting a bus in London and died four days later.

A ricin scare hit the Capitol in 2004, when tests identified it in a letter in a Senate mail room that served then-Majority Leader Bill Frist’s office. The discovery led 16 employees to undergo decontamination; none was sickened, Frist said.

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