An eighth letter containing suspicious powder and addressed to a governor’s office was intercepted in Alaska, and it bore a Texas postmark like suspicious mailings to other governors this week, officials said.
A spokeswoman for Alaska Governor Sarah Palin said the letter was received on Tuesday in Juneau at a mailroom about a block from the Capitol, and it was addressed to Palin’s predecessor governor Frank Murkowski, who left office two years ago.
Palin spokeswoman Sharon Leighow said the letter came from Texas, but she did not know which city. Seven suspicious letters to governors’ offices received this week bore Dallas postmarks, the FBI said on Tuesday.
And while those seven letters were determined to contain harmless powder, results of tests on the Alaska letter were pending on Tuesday night, the FBI office in Anchorage said.
Government operations were disrupted on Monday when workers in Alabama, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana and Rhode Island opened the letters and discovered white powder.
In Alabama, the Department of Public Safety said on Tuesday the letter received at its state Capitol contained a harmless food substance. In Missouri, a chemical analysis by the state health lab found the powder appeared to be bleached flour, spokeswoman Nanci Gonder said on Tuesday.
FBI spokesman Rich Kolko in Washington said that the Dallas FBI office is investigating and warned other states to be on the lookout for similar letters.
In Juneau, the building housing the mailroom was emptied of workers, and a hazardous materials team collected material from the scene.
The worker who opened the letter showed no signs of exposure to a hazardous material and was released, said Richard Ethridge, a Juneau fire department division chief.
Palin, the former Republican vice presidential candidate who splits time between Anchorage and Juneau, was in the capital on Tuesday to host the annual holiday party at the governor’s mansion, which was held as planned.
The FBI declined to say if the letters intercepted on Monday were specifically addressed to each governor or written to a generic “governor’s office” address.
Alabama’s public safety director, Christopher Murphy, said the letter received in Montgomery did not specifically target Governor Bob Riley but declined to elaborate on what it said.
The letters forced the evacuation of the Capitol in Helena, Montana, and the closing of a major street in downtown Montgomery for several hours.
Kolko said even hoax letters could be considered a crime.
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