Meteorological Weapon Weather Weapons America Fires in Hawaii Doubt .docx
Plumbing the mysteries of Plum Island
1. Plumbing the mysteries of Plum Island
(CBS News) A place that's off-limits to most of us was in the news this past week. The federal
government announced it has granted a license for a new foot-and-mouth vaccine . . . a vaccine
developed at the Plum Island Animal Disease Center. With correspondent John Miller we get a rare
inside look:
Plum Island sits at the end of New York's Long Island like a question mark. For nearly 60 years,
controversies and mysteries have engulfed it.
And no wonder. The island is controlled by the Department of Homeland Security. Its labs are
staffed by scientists from the United States Department of Agriculture. They come and go by special
government ferries, guarded by armed officers.
We were asked not to film the docks on either side.
So what really goes on here? The USDA says scientists study diseases that can affect livestock,
primarily overseas, to develop vaccines.
And although the government says the germs stored on the island affect only animals, that doesn't
mean they're not dangerous. And information about them is strictly protected for security reasons.
"I cannot comment on our list of pathogens and the inventories and all those things that are
sensitive information," said Luis Rodriguez, a research leader work for the Agricultural Research
Service, an arm of the USDA on Plum Island.
Microbiologist Marvin Grubman said Plum Island used to be a battery for the Army before the First
World War and into the Second World War - the idea being the island was going to protect New York
City from invading armadas.
So today, why is Plum Island still guarded like an armed camp?
"Post-9/11 security in the U.S., and of course around the world, has increased because of the
potential threat of the bioterrorist weapon," said Grubman. "So since we work with diseases of
animals, it's in the U.S. interest not
http://www.travelpod.com/travel-blog-entries/elfinkisme707/1/1425750622/tpod.html to allow
potential terrorists to come in here and obtain a virus and distribute it around the world."
Is that the far-fetched plotline of a novel? Maybe not.
When Afia Saddiqui, an MIT graduate working as a scientist for al Qaeda was captured in
Afghanistan in 2008, Plum Island was on a list of targets she kept.
Grubman said that the majority of the work being done at Plum Island is focused on foot and mouth
disease virus. "Foot and mouth disease is an economically important disease," he said. "For instance,
the outbreak of 2001 in the United Kingdom resulted in the slaughter of millions of animals and the
2. loss of billions of dollar to the economy."
Grubman has worked on the island for some 36 years. He was evacuated during an outbreak in 1978
of the highly-contagious foot and mouth disease (formerly - and perhaps more aptly - called hoof and
mouth) which overwhelmingly affects cattle.
"There was construction going on on the island and there was a release of virus from the
laboratory," Grubman said, though he added that the virus never left Plum Island or reached the
mainland.
Back then, animals were kept outside in pens, as seen in CBS News footage. When the virus
escaped, it quickly spread from one animal to the next.
More than 200 animals had to be put to death.
A vocal critic of Plum Island is Michael Carroll, who detailed his reasons in his book, "Lab 257." He
says the USDA's record of running the island is "somewhere between dismal and abominable. Their
record is really a record of mishaps, outbreaks, people getting infected."
After the 1978 outbreak, biocontainment facilities (that's sealed laboratories and holding cells) were
built and all animals were moved inside.
Pictures of them were taken by CBS in 1999.
But just five years after that, there were two more outbreaks - this time, inside the biocontainment
units.
"We have learned from those lessons," said Rodriguez. "So there are a lot of procedures. It's like an
onion where you have layer over layer of safety procedures."
The Department of Agriculture says Michael Carroll hasn't been on the island in more than a decade.
But Carroll told Miller he does not believe the changes have made a difference.
"I think there have been a bunch of what I would call façade improvements," Carroll said. "But in
reality it's the same place it always has been."
The very history of Plum Island - a post-WWII Army biological weapons lab, the decades of secrecy
and today's tight security - all seem to conspire to feed the rumors about what really goes on here.
The less that was known, the more people invented: Stories like that of the Montauk Monster, a
creature spawned in the lab that escaped into the sea. Rumors about alien experiments.
But the most pervasive story is the one about Lyme disease. Carroll, a lawyer who admits he has no
background in science, contends in his book that Lyme disease was fostered on Plum Island and
spread.
Researcher Grubman denies the claim: "There is no scientific basis for suggesting that Lyme disease
originated on Plum Island. In fact, the scientific evidence indicates that it did not."