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Clandestine Drug Labs

Clandestine Drug Labs. Extent of Problem. $175 of raw materials 1 pound of pure methamphetamine $32,000 street value. Clandestine Drug Labs. 85% of activity is in three states: California Oregon Texas. Clandestine Drug Labs. Calls to investigate “unusual odors” Dried cat urine

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Clandestine Drug Labs

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  1. Clandestine Drug Labs

  2. Extent of Problem • $175 of raw materials • 1 pound of pure methamphetamine • $32,000 street value

  3. Clandestine Drug Labs • 85% of activity is in three states: • California • Oregon • Texas

  4. Clandestine Drug Labs • Calls to investigate “unusual odors” • Dried cat urine • Cat litter • Rotten garbage

  5. Clandestine Drug Labs • Responses to overdoses • Responses to corrosive exposures or burns that are poorly explained

  6. Clandestine Drug Labs • Windows covered with plastic, cardboard, or paint • “Chemistry lab” glassware

  7. Clandestine Drug Labs • 20% are detected when they explode or catch fire • The “routine” structure or vehicle fire may turn out to NOT be so routine!

  8. Everything associated with an clandestine drug lab is hazardous!

  9. Hazards • Chemical • Flammables • Corrosives • Compressed gases • Toxins • Cyanide • Phosgene

  10. Hazards • Physical • Unstable containers • Confined spaces, obstacles • Poor or absent ventilation • Slippery footing

  11. Hazards • Electrical • Exposed wiring • Reversed switches, rheostats

  12. Hazards • Biological • Attack dogs (10% of labs) • Venomous animals

  13. Hazards • Booby traps • Grenades on trip wires • Fish hooks hung at eye level • Punji pits • Explosives connected to electrical switches • Crossbows and spear guns on trip wires

  14. Hazards • Booby traps • Contact explosives • Acid containers on door jambs • Creative carpentry

  15. Operations • Unattended lab is most dangerous • Some processes take up to 72 hours • Operators set up reactions, leave • Impossible to determine stage process is in or how to shut it down

  16. Operations • Touch nothing! • Attempt to turn off nothing! • Get out as quickly as possible! • Do NOT use your radio until you are out of and well away from lab!

  17. Operations • Lab, area containing any personnel or equipment in contact with lab is HAZMAT HOT zone! • Vehicles that have come in contact with equipment, people that entered lab are part of HOT zone!

  18. Local law enforcement DEA EPA Fire department first alarm response HAZMAT team Police EOD unit Local health department Additional EMS units EMS supervisory personnel Response should include

  19. Operations • Drug lab incidents are multi-agency operations! • Time to plan for them is BEFORE lab is discovered!

  20. Operations • Stable patient: • Leave lab • Remain in hot zone with patient until HAZMAT team arrives • Do NOT return to ambulance if it is outside hot zone • Follow HAZMAT team instructions regarding decon

  21. Operations • Unstable patient: • Advise hospital of situation • Request HAZMAT response to hospital to conduct decon there • Hospital personnel who contact patient, you, or your equipment will require decon

  22. Operations • Evacuate structures on all sides of lab • If fire or spill is present, evacuate downwind • If structure is burning, protect exposures; let it burn! • Consider spread, effects of runoff

  23. Operations • Wait on DEA chemist before making decisions to cut off power, gas, or water • Gas, power, water should be shut off from well outside building • In some cases chemist may recommend withdrawing, waiting for process to complete

  24. Operations • Personnel monitoring • EMS should monitor everyone working in the hot zone • Everyone leaving the hot zone should be evaluated after decontamination

  25. Operations • Danger signs • Nausea • Vomiting • Headache • Flushed face • Burning of nose, throat, lungs • Drowsiness • Numbness, tingling of lips • Blurred vision

  26. Operations • Drug labs are crime scenes • Protect the evidence!

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