Perfume believed cause of U.S. Postal Service worker’s illness in Greenville

UPDATE @ 5:24 p.m.: A U.S. Postal Service letter carrier apparently suffered an allergic reaction to perfume coming from letters in his service truck, a Greenville City Fire Department captain said.

"There are a lot of allergic reactions that can happen," Capt. Shawn Brandenburg said. "A lot of people have [reactions] with perfumes."

>> Ohio may end death penalty 

Brandenburg said his crews, city police and Darke County Sheriff's deputies were dispatched to the 5000 block of Meeker Road on a report of someone suffering from a medical emergency.

He said crews, out of concern for the letter carrier, checked for a possible biological threat but found the dispatch to be an isolated incident and not a HAZMAT situation.

According to the preliminary investigation, the letter carrier was reacting to perfume that had been sprayed on some letters.

The letter carrier, whose name was not released, is in good condition at WayneHealthCare, the captain said.

The postal service will return the truck to the postal facility in Greenville and investigate the incident further, Brandenburg said.

INITIAL REPORT

A U.S. Postal Service worker who fell ill while driving one of the service trucks in Greenville has triggered a possible HAZMAT incident.

>> VIDEO: See pursuit, crash after Miami Twp. shooting

Darke County Sheriff's Chief Deputy Mark Whittaker said the postal worker, believed to be a male, was on his rounds in the 5000 block of Meeker Road when he fell ill and pulled over.

The worker ended up at WayneHealthCare, Whittaker said. His condition is not known.

Deputies have taped off the postal truck, the rectangular ones seen most often on city streets and roads, which is in a parking lot on Meeker Road.

A postal inspector called to the scene has arrived and is investigating.

Meeker Road is blocked at state Route 49 until further notice.

News Center 7 will update this developing report as more details are released.

If you have a news tip, call our 24-hour line at 937-259-2237 or send it to newsdesk@cmgohio.com

About the Author