Grand Jury Indicts Prisoner In Anthrax Hoax
Grand Jury Indicts Prisoner
In Anthrax Hoax
NEW HAVEN â A federal grand jury has indicted a man who allegedly mailed two anthrax hoax letters to federal agencies last summer while he was imprisoned at Garner Correctional Institution in Newtown.
On November 19, the grand jury indicted Roy Sastrom, 44, with two counts of mailing threatening communications and with two counts of perpetrating an anthrax hoax, according to the US Attorneyâs office.
 According to the indictment, while imprisoned on August 8, Sastrom mailed an envelope to the clerkâs office of the US Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., in which Sastrom had placed a substance and a letter bearing the words âAnthrax Die!â
Also, on September 15, Sastrom sent another envelope to the headquarters of the US Department of Veterans Affairs in Washington, D.C., containing a substance and a letter bearing the words, âAnthrax Die!,â according to the US Attorney.
âEach of the letters was analyzed for anthrax and for the presence of several other chemical and biological agents. All tests were negative,â according to the statement from the US Attorney.
 On May 31, Sastrom had escaped as a prisoner from Connecticut Valley Hospital in Middletown, after which he was arrested in Bridgeport by Bridgeport police on June 3. He was later imprisoned at Garner.
If convicted in the anthrax hoax, Sastrom who has a long criminal record, would face a maximum prison term of 20 years.
Sastrom is currently serving a two-year prison term on a first-degree larceny conviction.