'Cyanide letter' sent to White House, says Secret Service

By BBC Online
18 March 2015, 06:43 AM
UPDATED 1 April 2015, 00:23 AM

The US Secret Service says it is conducting further tests on an envelope posted to the White House which may contain cyanide.

Tests at a post screening facility were found to have traces of the poison.

The Secret Service, which is responsible for President Barack Obama's security, said an investigation was under way.

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The water in the fountain on the South Lawn of the White House flows green in celebration of St. Patrick's Day in Washington, March 17 2015. Photo: Reuters

Initial tests on Monday were negative but more tests on Tuesday returned a "presumptive positive" for cyanide.

"The sample was transported to another facility to confirm the results," Secret Service spokesman Robert Hoback said in a statement.

He added there would be no further comment.

There were no injuries or exposure concerns for the screening facility employee who first opened the letter, a law enforcement official told CNN.

The discovery was first disclosed by The Intercept, which obtained an internal law enforcement document.

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US Secret Service agents keep watch from the roof of the White House in Washington, March 17 2015. Photo:Reuters

Earlier on Tuesday, the Secret Service director Joseph Clancy was questioned by a congressional committee about a series of recent security lapses.