I'm sure it was baby powder
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Police did not find any powder or harmful substance in several “suspicious” envelopes sent to Arizona GOP gubernatorial nominee Kari Lake’s campaign office, according to a Phoenix police spokesperson.
Police were called to Lake’s campaign office on Nov. 5 over several “suspicious” envelopes that a volunteer had found, police spokeswoman Donna Rossi said in a statement to The Hill.
The volunteer reportedly found an envelope on Nov. 4 that contained a white powdery substance and a letter that contained vulgar language, which they threw in the trash that was later disposed of by cleaning staff, Rossi said. The same volunteer later found two more similar envelopes.
The campaign office’s head of security called the police a day later when he learned of the letters, Rossi said. Upon examining the two remaining letters, he found that they were still sealed and felt as though they contained a powdery substance.
While the letters did contain “derogatory and vulgar statements,” Rossi said that the lab’s analysis showed that “there was no powder present and no harmful substance in either of the envelopes.” -
Police did not find any powder or harmful substance in several “suspicious” envelopes sent to Arizona GOP gubernatorial nominee Kari Lake’s campaign office, according to a Phoenix police spokesperson.
Police were called to Lake’s campaign office on Nov. 5 over several “suspicious” envelopes that a volunteer had found, police spokeswoman Donna Rossi said in a statement to The Hill.
The volunteer reportedly found an envelope on Nov. 4 that contained a white powdery substance and a letter that contained vulgar language, which they threw in the trash that was later disposed of by cleaning staff, Rossi said. The same volunteer later found two more similar envelopes.
The campaign office’s head of security called the police a day later when he learned of the letters, Rossi said. Upon examining the two remaining letters, he found that they were still sealed and felt as though they contained a powdery substance.
While the letters did contain “derogatory and vulgar statements,” Rossi said that the lab’s analysis showed that “there was no powder present and no harmful substance in either of the envelopes.”@George-K said in I'm sure it was baby powder:
The volunteer reportedly found an envelope on Nov. 4 that contained a white powdery substance and a letter that contained vulgar language, which they threw in the trash that was later disposed of by cleaning staff.
The campaign office’s head of security called the police a day later when he learned of the letters.
Welcome to Planet Earth, Volunteer! Lemme explain how we on our planet handle threatening letters that accompany suspicious contents!
Nice they finally got around to notifying the head of security.