[Politech] Debunking a myth: Internet recipe lets you make ricin poison [fs]

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Date: Sun Feb 22 2004 - 21:19:07 PST

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    Date: Fri, 20 Feb 2004 18:33:21 -0500
    From: George Smith <70743.1711@private>
    Subject: National Security Notes 02/20/2004
    Sender: George Smith <70743.1711@private>
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    February 20, 2004
    
    National Security Notes:
    
    Contents:
    
    THE RECIPE FOR RICIN: Examining the legend
    BIOWAR IS HELL
    THE RICIN INDEX
    ==========================================
    
    
    THE RECIPE FOR RICIN: Examining the legend
    
    One of the great received wisdoms of the war on terror is that deadly
    recipes are available worldwide courtesy of the Internet. In the context of
    information on ricin, the meme presents
    regularly in the big media.
    
    In a news story from CNN, "[Ricin] ... it's easy to make, using a recipe
    you can get off the Internet."
    
    "Making the poison is simple enough -- instructions are on the
    Internet -- that an amateur chemist can follow the process," echoed the Los
    Angeles Times.
    
    The New York Times weighs in with "A five-minute Internet search yesterday
    produced a kitchen recipe [for ricin] using lye and acetone ..." And, wrote
    the Atlanta Journal, "Some Internet sites offer a 13-step recipe..."
    
    And in Congressional Research Service Report RS21383, "Ricin: Technical
    Background and Potential Role in Terrorism:" "Recipes for the extraction of
    ricin ... are widely available for purchase on the Internet ... "
    
    If you're a terrorist or even just a bemused bystander, the message is
    clear and authoritative by repetition. Go to the web; seek and ye shall
    find a home formulation for a poison with no antidote.
    
    But is this really a recipe for ricin?
    
    The electronic missive which is the object of media references is found on
    a website called The Temple of the Screaming Electron. Clones of the
    instruction sheet with miscellaneous edits have been pasted to other places
    on the web, but the Screaming Electron recipe appears to be the original
    from which the others are drawn.
    
    Entitled "How to Make Ricin," the recipe may appear slightly convincing to
    journalists and observers with no prior knowledge of the isolation and
    purification of fine biochemicals. However, there are no steps in the
    recipe specific to the purification of ricin.
    
    The recipe includes instructions for the use of acetone and lye -- a
    non-specific term for any strong base, usually sodium or potassium
    hydroxide. Both are common chemicals. However, neither
    powerfully address any unique properties of ricin which would be exploited
    to differentially separate it from every other complex component in the
    mash of a castor seed.  Indeed, the entire recipe shows no real effort to
    achieve this end.  Even the step by step instructions, as written,
    can be picked apart for a variety of reasons.
    
    The best result that can be claimed for "How To Make Ricin" is that it
    physically removes the hull of the castor seed and subjects the remains to
    a drying. One could just as well use the recipe on wheat germ or crushed
    peanuts. Of course, the latter do not contain ricin but the only reason the
    Screaming Electron posting could be loosely dubbed a recipe for the poison
    is that castor seeds come with ricin included.
    
    The recipe for ricin is framed more properly if one examines its
    provenance.
    
    In the early Nineties, the Temple of the Screaming Electron was a bulletin
    board system, one of a network of many run by high school and college-age
    young boys and men. Taken as a whole, they cultivated an image of darkness
    in the wires, electronic places where the like-minded could hang out and
    thumb their noses at parents and elders bewildered by computing.
    
    The Screaming Electron, like many similar to it, accumulated a huge pile of
    what were dubbed "anarchy files" -- allegedly how-to's devoted to
    explaining how a variety of physical and electronic mayhems could be
    committed. Of most interest were the electronic missives that dealt with
    computer hacking and virus-writing.
    
    Because information on the latter activities was hard to come by, the
    Screaming Electron attracted employees of government agencies like the
    Department of the Treasury and the Drug Enforcement Administration, as well
    as others. The Feds, as the small group was sometimes called, used the
    Screaming Electron ("TOTSE," for short) and other bulletin boards to chat
    with hackers and virus-writers and learn about their techniques so they
    could better secure their own systems and also brief colleagues.
    
    Huge stacks of anarchy files served as backdrop, things with titles like
    "How to Build an A-bomb," and "Gaining the Upper Hand in a Street Brawl."
    They were not, as a rule, taken very seriously by the professionals who
    visited the systems. And it is in this time period when "How to Make Ricin"
    and things of similar nature came into being, long before 9/11, anthrax and
    daily news of the threat of bioterror.
    
    Part of the allure of such texts to teen denizens of the bulletin board
    underground was the whiff of danger they furnished. Although largely phony,
    they helped build an image that home computing had put great amplifying
    powers of the intellect into the hands of teenagers. They knew
    things, dangerous things, adults and parents didn't! And this fed a
    conceit, often abetted by stories on hackers in glossy magazines and movies
    like "Wargames," that the future was going to be decided on the wires
    coming out of suburban basements. The physical world no longer mattered,
    all the action was in cyberspace.
    
    Like many received wisdoms peddled concerning the power of technology,
    while entertaining
    and captivating to the imagination, it was a crock. But it has stayed in
    circulation, so strong that it is almost constantly seen somewhere -- on
    television, in magazines, on the radio or in newspapers.
    
    Sometime long before 9/11, the anarchy files from teenage bulletin board
    systems migrated to the world wide web. Here they gained a much larger
    audience. With search engines indexing the content of the internet, it was
    no longer necessary to actually know the telephone number of a system like
    The Temple of the Screaming Electron.
    
    But "How to Make Ricin" still carries the marks of the teen computer
    underground, although this is never mentioned in stories on the alleged
    ease of obtaining the recipe.
    
    "Here's the formula for Ricin," the anonymous teen contributor of the
    recipe writes in remarks glued on to the beginning and end of the
    procedure. "I wanted the fomula just so I could know it. This stuff is
    extrodinarily poisonous -- arsenic takes 100 granuals to kill someone,
    ricin takes 1-2 granuals," complete with lamentable spelling, he writes at
    another point.
    
    At the end of the recipe, "Don't ask me where to get the [castor] beans I
    don't know but its a semi-common plant (as in a large greenhouse will have
    it) Now you see why kids back in the day didn't wanna drink that castor
    bean cough syrup."
    
    Created by a boy, "How to Make Ricin" makes the mistakes of thinking ricin
    might be in castor oil and that it was a cough syrup. Anyone, now older,
    who has taken castor oil well knows its reputation as a cathartic. The
    substance is, however, ricin free.
    
    Today, the drumbeat of the menace of bioterror and the complimentary idea
    that the technology of weapons of mass destruction is simple and in the
    hands of anyone who wants it have combined to give "how to make ricin" way
    more currency than it ever deserved.
    
    However, to continue to believe in it requires that everyone swallow that
    some anonymous American teen, pecking away in his bedroom, cribbing from
    yet another source of suspect rigor, has some professional expertise in the
    isolation, purification and toxicology of plant proteins.
    
    This is not the case. But because the legend of ricin on the internet is so
    often repeated by
    news sources viewed as authoritative -- politicians believe it, a large
    assortment of experts view it as true, terrorist-hunters go by it and,
    presumably, terrorists and criminals themselves accept it.
    
    Finally, the mythology of the recipe for ricin exposes one of the most
    nettlesome ironies of instantaneous world wide communication. Although it
    has always been promised that the ubiquity of networked computing would
    enable a host of alternative information sources, what is
    found is that -- in practice and when push comes to shove -- the allegedly
    vast ocean of alternatives all say the same thing, with only minor
    variations, all drawing from the same text, the same myth.
    
    ===============================
    
    BIOWAR IS HELL
    
    To paraphrase William T. Sherman, biowar is Hell, but apparently never so
    hellish that it cannot be accompanied by an advertisement.
    
    "Novel Already Out on Ricin Poison Found in Senate Office Building"
    trumpeted a press release announcing the relatively recent publication of a
    thriller.
    
    "Straight from today's headlines, Coby Derek James' provocative and
    ambitious whodunit -- 'Wine, Dine and Death Down Under' opens with a
    present-day threat: ricin, a deadly and widely available poison with no
    known antidote," informs a memo from the PR Newswire.
    
    "With a sense of quickly mounting danger and international intrigue, and
    with the skill and insight of one who knows firsthand the world of
    bioterrorism and espionage, the author has created a timely and gripping
    spy novel."
    
    It is said the author, going under a pseudonym, "has more than 30 years of
    combined diplomatic and intelligence experience."
    
    "Wine, Dine and Death Down Under"
    Publication: July 2003  Llumina Press
    Author: Coby Derek James ISBN: 1-932303-09X
    
    ==================
    
    
    THE RICIN INDEX -- with apologies to Harper's
    
    Number of deaths due to ricin bioterror: 1, Georgi Markov in 1978
    
    Number of times Georgi Markov's ricin death cited in news since February:
    about 139, according to the Google News tab.
    
    ==================================
    
    National Security Notes is edited in Pasadena, CA, by George Smith, Ph.D.
    Smith is a Senior Fellow at GlobalSecurity.Org.
    
    National Security Notes, on the web:
    
    http://www.globalsecurity.org/org/nsn/index.html
    
    copyright 2004
    
    
    
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