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Posted: 4/26/2013 1:11:02 AM EST
Crews load and unload consumer products at the Port of New Orleans along the Mississippi River in New Orleans, Louisiana June 23, 2010. REUTERS/Sean Gardner
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Posted: 4/26/2013 1:11:02 AM EST
Containers await departure as crews load and unload consumer products at the Port of New Orleans along the Mississippi River in New Orleans, Louisiana June 23, 2010. REUTERS/Sean Gardner
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Posted: 4/26/2013 1:11:02 AM EST
Crews load and unload consumer products at the Port of New Orleans along the Mississippi River in New Orleans, Louisiana June 23, 2010. REUTERS/Sean Gardner
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Posted: 4/26/2013 1:11:02 AM EST
Containers await departure as crews load and unload consumer products at the Port of New Orleans along the Mississippi River in New Orleans, Louisiana June 23, 2010. REUTERS/Sean Gardner
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Posted: 4/25/2013 7:15:56 PM EST
Hazmat officers enter a taekwondo studio previously operated by James Everett Dutschke in Tupelo, Mississippi April 24, 2013. REUTERS/Lauren Wood/Daily Journal
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Posted: 4/25/2013 3:08:25 AM EST
FILE - In this Tuesday, April 23, 2013 file photo, Dawn Moss, right, shows her 3-year-old son Sabastian Spangler how to fill a sandbag after the family finished building a temporary floodwall around their house in Dutchtown, Mo. The Mississippi River is expected to crest about 10 feet above flood stage Thursday at Dutchtown. The 100 or so residents in the southeast Missouri town have been seeking to have their homes bought out by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. But FEMA says Dutchtown has yet to supply an adequate cost-to-benefit analysis. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson, File)
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Posted: 4/25/2013 3:08:25 AM EST
FILE - In this Tuesday, April 23, 2013 file photo, heavy machinery moves sandbags as other sit staged, ready for possible use in the fight against floodwaters in Dutchtown, Mo. The Mississippi River is expected to crest about 10 feet above flood stage Thursday at Dutchtown. The 100 or so residents in the southeast Missouri town have been seeking to have their homes bought out by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. But FEMA says Dutchtown has yet to supply an adequate cost-to-benefit analysis. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson, File)
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Posted: 4/24/2013 5:38:23 PM EST
In a Jan. 5, 2004 photo Sadie Holland takes the oath of office for Justice Court Judge during the swearing in ceremony at the Lee County Justice Center in Tupelo, Miss. The letter containing ricin sent to Holland was the only one to make into the hands of an intended target. (AP Photo/Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal))
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Posted: 4/24/2013 5:38:23 PM EST
In a 2011 photo Sadie Holland takes the oath of office for Justice Court Judge during the swearing in ceremony at the Lee County Justice Center in Tupelo, Miss. The letter containing ricin sent to Holland was the only one to make into the hands of an intended target. (AP Photo/Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal, C. Todd Sherman)
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Posted: 4/24/2013 2:06:57 PM EST
James E. Dutschke stands in the steet and waits for the FBI to arrive and search his home in Tupelo, Mississippi April 23, 2013 in connection with the recent ricin attacks on Sen. Wicker and President Barack Obama. REUTERS/Thomas Wells/Daily Journal
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Posted: 4/24/2013 11:03:27 AM EST
Everett Dutschke stands in the steet near his home in Tupelo, Miss., and waits for the FBI to arrive and search his home Tuesday April 23, 2013 in connection with the sending of poisoned letters to President Barack Obama and others last week. Paul Kevin Curtis, the man charged with sending the letters, was released from jail Tuesday on bond, while FBI agents returned Dutschke's house where they'd previously searched in connection with the case. (AP Photo/Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal, Thomas Wells) MANDATORY CREDIT
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Posted: 4/24/2013 4:48:19 AM EST
Everett Dutschke stands in the steet near his home in Tupelo, Miss., and waits for the FBI to arrive and search his home Tuesday April 23, 2013 in connection with the sending of poisoned letters to President Barack Obama and others last week. Paul Kevin Curtis, the man charged with sending the letters, was released from jail Tuesday on bond, while FBI agents returned Dutschke's house where they'd previously searched in connection with the case. (AP Photo/Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal, Thomas Wells) MANDATORY CREDIT
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Posted: 4/23/2013 9:15:40 PM EST
Paul Kevin Curtis is seen dressed as an Elvis impersonator in this picture taken in 1999. REUTERS/Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal
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Posted: 4/23/2013 9:08:30 PM EST
An FBI agent stops homeowner Everett Dutschke from approaching his home Tuesday, April 23, 2013, in Tupelo, Miss., as they search his home in connection with the sending of poisoned letters to President Barack Obama and others last week. Paul Kevin Curtis, the man charged with sending the letters, was released from jail Tuesday on bond, while FBI agents returned Dutschke's house where they'd previously searched in connection with the case. (AP Photo/Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal, Thomas Wells) MANDATORY CREDIT
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Posted: 4/23/2013 8:53:45 PM EST
An FBI agent stops homeowner James E. Dutschke from approaching his home Tuesday, April 23, 2013, in Tupelo, Miss. The agents begin to serach his home in connection with the ricin letters sent to Sen. Roger Wicker and President Barack Obama.(AP Photo/Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal, Thomas Wells) MANDATORY CREDIT
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Posted: 4/23/2013 1:38:29 PM EST
AmeriCorps member Tom Schweiss places a hose in a pool of water to be pumped back into the Mississippi River Tuesday, April 23, 2013, in Clarksville, Mo. Communities along the Mississippi River and other Midwestern waterways eyed and in some cases fortified makeshift levees holding back floodwaters that meteorologists said could worsen or be prolonged by looming storms. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)
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Posted: 4/23/2013 1:38:29 PM EST
The reflection of AmeriCorps member Tom Schweiss is seen in the front door of a downtown business as he walks off a sandbag levee Tuesday, April 23, 2013, in Clarksville, Mo. Communities along the Mississippi River and other Midwestern waterways eyed and in some cases fortified makeshift levees holding back floodwaters that meteorologists said could worsen or be prolonged by looming storms. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)
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Posted: 4/23/2013 1:38:29 PM EST
AmeriCorps member Tom Schweiss places a hose in a pool of water to be pumped back into the Mississippi River Tuesday, April 23, 2013, in Clarksville, Mo. Communities along the Mississippi River and other Midwestern waterways eyed and in some cases fortified makeshift levees holding back floodwaters that meteorologists said could worsen or be prolonged by looming storms. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)
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Posted: 4/23/2013 12:18:39 PM EST
AmeriCorps member Tom Schweiss walks atop a sandbag levee as he monitors pumps Tuesday, April 23, 2013, in Clarksville, Mo. Communities along the Mississippi River and other Midwestern waterways eyed and in some cases fortified makeshift levees holding back floodwaters that meteorologists said could worsen or be prolonged by looming storms. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)
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Posted: 4/23/2013 3:08:31 AM EST
Heavy equipment is used in the effort to reinforce a temporary levee Monday, April 22, 2013, in Clarksville, Mo. The swollen Mississippi River has strained a hastily erected makeshift floodwall in Clarksville, creating two trouble spots that volunteers were scrambling to patch. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)