http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/ap/20020113/ts/us_germ_weapons_1.html

Bush May Limit Germ Weapons Info

 By SCOTT LINDLAW, Associated Press Writer 

 WASHINGTON (AP) - The Bush administration is considering whether to restrict 
distribution of
 government documents that describe how to make germ weapons, White House officials 
said Sunday. 

 U.S. stockpiles of offensive germ warfare agents were destroyed nearly three decades 
ago as part of
 the 1972 Biological Weapons Convention. But the government kept the blueprints for 
manufacturing
 such weapons, and continues to sell them. 

 ``The administration is generally conscious of this issue,'' John H. Marburger III, 
director of the White
 House Office of Science and Technology Policy, said in a telephone interview Sunday. 
``There are
 obviously people thinking about what to do about it.'' 

 The administration is likely to take action on the matter, Marburger said, adding 
that he did not know
 what action would be taken nor when. 

 Homeland Security director Tom Ridge hinted that the administration is strongly 
considering placing
 new restrictions on the information. 

 ``We are a very open society and we're very much an information society, and there 
are a lot of us that
 think that some of the information we share with the public probably should be 
restricted in some
 fashion,'' Ridge said on CNN's ``Late Edition.'' 

 Marburger and other administration officials are ``looking to see what kind of 
information should be so
 easily available in the public domain,'' Ridge said. Members of Congress have also 
aired concerns
 about the issue, he said. 

 ``We are open, we are trusting, but we have to be a little bit more careful and a 
little bit more vigilant,''
 Ridge said. ``And we may have to take a look at these kinds of issues from a 
different perspective
 because of the tragedy of September 11 and the follow-on incidents that we've had to 
deal with.'' 

 Several agencies are weighing the level of danger and possible action, Marburger 
said. A
 spokeswoman for the Defense Department said Sunday she could not comment, as did a 
White House
 spokesman. Representatives of the Justice Department (news - web sites) and the White 
House Office
 of Homeland Security did not return calls. 

 Marburger said he had not personally seen the documents on assembling such weapons. 
Among the
 questions is how dangerous they are, he said. 

 ``It is clear that they are based on a picture of biology that's almost 50 years 
old,'' he said. ``It's not
 clear to me how useful they are.'' 

 The New York Times first reported on the documents and the debate in Sunday editions, 
and said
 despite their age, the manuals contain information that could help produce the kind 
of anthrax powder
 infected at least 18 people and killed five in the United States last year. 

 According to the newspaper, federal agencies routinely sell the now-declassified 
documents to
 historians and researchers. The government provides more sensitive papers on the 
subject after
 Freedom of Information Act requests. 

 Dr. Harry G. Dangerfield, a retired Army colonel, is preparing a report for the 
military that will call for
 the reclassification of more than 200 reports that he told the newspaper are 
cookbooks for turning
 germs into weapons. 

 Any such move to reclassify the manuals would run into resistance from advocates of 
public access to
 government documents. 

 Moreover, an executive order signed by then-President Clinton (news - web sites) in 
1995 bars
 reclassification, the Times said. The Bush administration is considering its own 
order allowing the
 documents to once again be kept from public view, it reported. Marburger said Sunday 
he did not
 know about any such move. 

........

I found http://www.oie.int/eng/normes/mcode/A_00044.htm
to have enough info to culture and sporulate, though
you'd have to look elsewhere for freeze drying and milling
tech.

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