Showing posts with label FBI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FBI. Show all posts
Monday, April 30, 2012
Interview with Mailaise author Don Weiss
Detectologist:
What made you decide to write this book?
DW: I had written
a chapter on the anthrax outbreak for a non-fiction book on outbreak investigations
by Mark Dworkin and came across a number of interesting conspiratorial
coincidences that I thought would make a good novel.
Detectologist:
Conspiracies? What do you mean?
DW: Well, for
instance, two of the 9/11 hijackers
lived for a while in South Florida near the first anthrax case. On the same day
the case was announced on October 4, 2001, an Ukrainian missile shot down a
Russian commercial airline over the Black Sea. On board were microbiologists
from Novosibirsk. And after the attacks there was a series of deaths of other microbiologists,
some of whom were involved in bioterrorism research.
Detectologist: Fascinating.
What was it like during the actual outbreak?
DW: Did you ever
do wind sprints in high school? Running back and forth over the length of the
gym floor as fast as you can stopping at the foul line, mid-court,
three-quarter court and then full court? We worked long hours after the 9/11
attack doing surveillance for a secondary biologic attack. After that the anthrax
response was like doing a fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth wind sprint.
Detectologist: How
did you cope? It must have been nerve racking.
DW: Humor, but I
think writing the novel was a way for me to bring some closure to the
experience.
Detectologist: The
book matches up an epidemiologist with an FBI agent, how close to reality is
this?
DW: During the
anthrax outbreak we did work closely with an FBI agent, and one of our staff
was assigned to be the liaison with law enforcement. Mailaise does expand on this a bit.
Detectologist: Where
did the inspiration for the epidemiologist, Mackey Dunn and the FBI agent,
Charo Chen come from?
DW: The
characters are composites. A mix of the many people I’ve met, worked with and
known over time. I think it is necessary skill for writers to be observant. As
a friend of mine used to remind me, if you aren’t constantly amused it means
you aren’t paying attention. A lot of my ideas come from everyday situations.
Detectologist: You
decided to self publish through Amazon services. Can you share some of your
experiences?
DW: Sure. I
started Mailaise in 2007. Two and
half years, and several re-writes later I began contacting agents. I got very little
interest. After Mailaise won the Herdsfolk First Novel
Award I found an editor to help me polish it some more. I tried again with
agents, got a bit more interest but no takers. The publishing business has
become highly competitive, with the poor economy and the expansion of ebooks,
agents and publishers are very selective. I have so many ideas for stories I felt like it was time to
be done with this one and move on.
Detectologist: So,
what’s next? Are you working on a sequel?
DW: Yes. I am
close to completing the first draft of a sequel in which Mackey and Charo
investigate a smallpox outbreak in New York City. Then there is the unfinished
first Dunn novel and a novella I wrote between books. I have no shortage of
ideas.
Detectologist: Very
interesting, I look forward to reading the sequel; what’s it called?
DW: It’s a
historical mystery called The Curse of
Cortes.
Labels:
anthrax,
Charo Chen,
FBI,
Herdsfolk,
Mackey Dunn,
Mailaise,
smallpox
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
Inhalation Anthrax in NYC-Fall 2001 (Part 4)
No one wanted to say it out loud. The implications were too frightening. We were pretty confident that there wasn’t a release of anthrax spores other than when media staff opened the envelopes, but that alone wasn’t going to dissolve the city’s anxiety. As the November days passed and we had no explanation for the Kathy Nguyen inhalation case we faced the inevitable. We had to eliminate one very public place as the source, we had to test the NYC subway system.
None of us believed that the NYC subway was presenting a risk to anyone. If there had been a release underground we would’ve been dealing with many inhalation cases, not one. We had a pretty good idea though that spores could be tracked from their original location and the technology to find them was sophisticated. Staff from ABC, NBC, CBS or the NY Post could’ve tracked spores on the soles of their shoes anywhere. Despite our confidence that there weren’t legions of straphangers out there incubating inhalation anthrax we worried about positive results, even a single spore. We certainly couldn’t close the subways but it would be tough public message to craft. There are anthrax spores in the NYC Subway system, but it is safe to ride. I envisioned a TV crew taping Dan Rather and the Mayor sharing a pole on a downtown 6 train to make the point.
NYPD did the sampling with CDC and us directing them. Six train lines were tested at ten stations, over 200 samples. None were positive. While we breathed a collective sigh of relief, one final, tragic case was incubating the disease. A case as mysterious as Kathy Nguyen’s but one that would finally yield some answers.
Labels:
2001,
anthrax,
bioterrorism,
CDC,
FBI,
Kathy Nguyen,
NYC Department of Health,
NYPD
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