The Justice Department informed Friday that they have
reached a $4.6 million settlement with former U.S. Army scientist Steven
Hatfill, who was the prime suspect in the deadly anthrax letters of 2001.
The mailings were common hand-addressed letters, but they
contained tiny quantities of deadly anthrax powder. The first letter arrived at
American Media Inc. in South Florida. Five
people were killed and 17 were seriously affected by the attacks.
Steven Hatfill took former Attorney General John Ashcroft
and the department to court 5 years ago, under the accusations that his privacy
was violated when the media connected him to an investigation concerning the
biological attacks in the eastern United States.
Hatfill, a former Army biodefense researcher, was the prime
subject of news media exposure, but he was never charged. However, he stated
that the details reported by the media in that period damaged his reputation.
According to court papers, the agreement calls for an immediate
$2.82 million compensation to Hatfill and starting with 2009, he will be paid
an annuity of $150,000 a year for 20 years.
The lawsuit was filed by Hatfill in August 2003, but U.S.
District Court Judge Reggie B. Walton postponed the verdict for two years in
order to interrogate FBI officials. The government declared that the statements
of agents could obstruct the investigation.
Mark A. Grannis, one of Hatfill’s lawyers, stated on Friday
that his client’s position had been very uncomfortable in the past years and
that no one would like to be in his shoes.
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