San Diego Union-Tribune

KANSAS SECRETARY OF STATE’S BUILDING IS EVACUATED

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The Kansas Secretary of State’s Office received a letter Tuesday containing what Secretary Scott Schwab called “a suspicious substance.” Officials evacuated the building for the rest of the day.

Schwab’s office serves as the state’s top elections authority, and the incident occurred less than a week after election offices in at least five states states received threatenin­g mail. Some of that mail contained the potentiall­y dangerous opioid fentanyl.

The Kansas Bureau of Investigat­ion, taking the lead in the case, did not provide further details about the letter received Tuesday, and Schwab did not say what the suspicious substance was.

“With recent events, we take such things as a suspicious substance very serious,” Schwab said in a text to The Associated Press. “Our team is trained if they see something, say something.”

The KBI is working with the Kansas Highway Patrol, the state fire marshal’s office and the state Department of Health and Environmen­t, spokespers­on Melissa Underwood said in an emailed statement. She said authoritie­s evacuated the building, which also houses the Kansas attorney general’s office, “out of an abundance of caution.” The building that was evacuated is located near the Statehouse.

An officer inside the building Tuesday afternoon said it still was being secured. Two people who worked there went to the main entrance to have officers retrieve items left behind. They declined to comment afterward.

Local TV station WIBW reported that its crews saw Topeka Fire Department hazardous materials teams entering the building after it was evacuated. They were gone by the afternoon.

In June, dozens of Republican officials in Kansas, Montana and Tennessee received threatenin­g letters containing white powder, though tests did not detect toxins and no injuries were reported. Authoritie­s have yet to announce arrests.

Schwab is a Republican who has pushed back against baseless theories about the 2020 election being stolen.

 ?? JOHN HANNA AP ?? A law enforcemen­t officer inside the building that houses the Kansas Secretary of State’s Office hands a bag to a worker after the building was evacuated on Tuesday because the office in Topeka received a letter containing “a suspicious substance.”
JOHN HANNA AP A law enforcemen­t officer inside the building that houses the Kansas Secretary of State’s Office hands a bag to a worker after the building was evacuated on Tuesday because the office in Topeka received a letter containing “a suspicious substance.”

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