Current:Home > NewsSuspicious packages sent to election officials in at least 5 states -MacroWatch
Suspicious packages sent to election officials in at least 5 states
View
Date:2025-04-17 09:06:50
Suspicious packages were sent to election officials in at least five states on Monday, but there were no reports that any of the packages contained hazardous material.
Powder-containing packages were sent to secretaries of state and state election offices in Iowa, Nebraska, Tennessee, Wyoming and Oklahoma, officials in those states confirmed. The FBI and U.S. Postal Service were investigating. It marked the second time in the past year that suspicious packages were mailed to election officials in multiple state offices.
The latest scare comes as early voting has begun in several states less than two months ahead of the high-stakes elections for president, Senate, Congress and key statehouse offices around the nation, causing disruption in what is already a tense voting season.
Several of the states reported a white powder substance found in envelopes sent to election officials. In most cases, the material was found to be harmless. Oklahoma officials said the material sent to the election office there contained flour. Wyoming officials have not yet said if the material sent there was hazardous.
The packages forced an evacuation in Iowa. Hazmat crews in several states quickly determined the material was harmless.
“We have specific protocols in place for situations such as this,” Iowa Secretary of State Paul Pate said in a statement after the evacuation of the six-story Lucas State Office Building in Des Moines. “We immediately reported the incident per our protocols.”
A state office building in Topeka, Kansas, that is home to both the secretary of state’s office and the attorney general’s office was also evacuated due to suspicious mail. Authorities haven’t confirmed the mail was addressed to either of those offices.
In Oklahoma, the State Election Board received a suspicious envelope in the mail containing a multi-page document and a white, powdery substance, agency spokesperson Misha Mohr said in an email to The Associated Press. The Oklahoma Highway Patrol, which oversees security for the Capitol, secured the envelope. Testing determined the substance was flour, Mohr said.
Suspicious letters were sent to election offices in at least five states in early November. While some of the letters contained fentanyl, even the suspicious mail that was not toxic delayed the counting of ballots in some local elections.
One of the targeted offices was in Fulton County, Georgia, the largest voting jurisdiction in one of the nation’s most important swing states. Four county election offices in Washington state had to be evacuated as election workers were processing ballots cast, delaying vote-counting.
Election offices across the United States have taken steps to increase the security of their buildings and boost protections for workers amid an onslaught of harassment and threats following the 2020 election and the false claims that it was rigged.
___
Salter reported from O’Fallon, Missouri. Volmert reported from Lansing, Michigan. Mead Gruver in Cheyenne, Wyoming; Jonathan Mattise in Nashville, Tennessee; Summer Ballentine in Columbia, Missouri; Sean Murphy in Oklahoma City and John Hanna in Topeka, Kansas, contributed to this report.
veryGood! (7893)
Related
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- How do you handle a personal crisis at work? What managers should know. Ask HR
- Which NFL teams have never played in the Super Bowl? It's a short list.
- Post Malone, The Killers and SZA among headliners for 2024 Governors Ball in NYC
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Biden administration asks Supreme Court to intervene in its dispute with Texas over border land
- Ford, Volvo, Lucid among 159,000 vehicles recalled: Check car recalls here
- Stock market today: Asian shares mostly fall after Wall Street drop
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- The Integration of EIF Tokens in the Financial Sector
Ranking
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Chuck E. Cheese has a 'super-sized' game show in the works amid financial woes
- Kobe the husky dog digs a hole and saves a neighborhood from a gas leak catastrophe
- US in deep freeze while much of the world is extra toasty? Yet again, it’s climate change
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Fake White House fire report is latest high-profile swatting attempt: What to know
- It's respiratory virus season. Here's what to know about the winter 'tripledemic'
- Alabama execution using nitrogen gas could amount to torture and violate human rights treaties, U.N. warns
Recommendation
Travis Hunter, the 2
Biden administration asks Supreme Court to intervene in its dispute with Texas over border land
China’s population drops for a second straight year as deaths jump
Eagles center Jason Kelce intends to retire after 13 NFL seasons, AP sources say
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
Bernie Sanders forces US senators into a test vote on military aid as the Israel-Hamas war grinds on
Russian missiles hit Ukrainian apartment buildings and injure 17 in latest strikes on civilian areas
St. John’s coach Rick Pitino is sidelined by COVID-19 for game against Seton Hall