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Anthrax bacteria found in second Florida man

FBI overseeing investigation in anthrax cases, people wait for antibiotics and tests

BOCA RATON, Fla. -- The FBI took over the investigation of a Florida man's anthrax death on Monday after the germ was found in the nose of a co-worker and on a computer keyboard in their office. \n"We regard this as an investigation that could become a clear criminal investigation," Attorney General John Ashcroft said during a news conference in Washington. "We don't have enough information to know whether this could be related to terrorism or not." \nThe FBI sealed off the Boca Raton office building housing the supermarket tabloid The Sun, where the men worked. How the bacterial spores got into the newspaper's office was still under investigation.\nMore than 200 people lined up for antibiotics and anthrax tests by late afternoon. \n"I feel nervous. I'm worried for everybody," said David Hayes, an editor for the Star, another tabloid headquartered in the building. \nAnthrax cannot be spread from person to person, but all 300 employees in the building, and anyone who spent more than an hour inside since Aug. 1, were advised to visit Palm Beach County's health agency. Antibiotics can be used to treat anthrax, though the form that caused last week's death is particularly lethal. \nHealth officials said there was no public health threat, even to building employees. "The risk is low," said Dr. John Agwunobi, Florida secretary of health. \nAshcroft said the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta was providing expertise in the case. Florida Lt. Gov. Frank Brogan confirmed the FBI was in control of the investigation. \nBob Stevens, 63, a photo editor for The Sun, died Friday of inhalation anthrax, an extremely rare and deadly form of the disease. The last such death in the United States was in 1976. \nOn Monday, officials said another Sun employee, whose name was not released, had anthrax bacteria in his nasal passages. Relatively large anthrax spores that lodge in the upper respiratory tract are less dangerous than smaller spores that get into the lungs. \nThe co-worker was in stable condition at an unidentified Miami-Dade County hospital, according to health officials. He had been tested for anthrax because he happened to be in a hospital for an unrelated and undisclosed illness. \nThe man has not been diagnosed with the disease, and CDC spokeswoman Barbara Reynolds said authorities may never know whether he actually had anthrax because antibiotics may have killed it before it was detected. \nDavid Pecker, chief executive of the tabloids' publisher, American Media Inc., said the man worked in the mailroom. The sample of anthrax that was found in the building was taken from Stevens' computer keyboard, Agwunobi said. \nThe Sept. 11 terrorist attacks have raised fears of bioterrorism across the country, but there is particular concern about the origin of the anthrax in Florida.

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