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Monday, April 29, 2013

Elvis Impersonator Falsely Accused of Sending Ricin Letters to President Obama







Kevin Curtis speaks to inside edition on how he was falsely accused of sending Ricin Letters to President Barrack Obama. The Elvis Impersonator said he couldn't of possibly sent the Ricin Letters to the White House and he may of been blackmailed by a person already knows him. Who could of sent the letters?

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Paul Kevin Curtis, 45, recently interviewed with INSIDE EDITION on the false accusation of Ricin Letters sent to President Obama.  The Elvis Impersonator of Mississippi was possibly blackmailed by someone who already knows him or has seen one of his Impersonations.  Curtis's comments were "someone who knows me must really not like me to do this." The case against Curtis was dismissed after no evidence was found.  The suspected individual that knows Curtis, whom also competed in Elvis Impersonator competitions says he has nothing to do with the incident and says everyone that knows him family, friends, and his neighbors think this is just "Crazy."  
Ricin is  a highly toxic natrual protein from the castor oil plant Ricinus communis.  Just a few grains of salt is deadly to a human.  Ricin is less toxic as an oral exposure from 20-30 miligrams per kilograms, where an injection or inhalation median lethal dose is about 22 kilograms.



Article Photo
Ricin is a natrually toxic protein found in the plant Ricinus Communis.




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