Animal shelter evacuated after FBI incinerates meth at facility
Animal shelter evacuated after FBI incinerates meth at facility

www.bbc.com
Animal shelter evacuated after FBI incinerates meth at facility

Animal shelter evacuated after FBI incinerates meth at facility
Animal shelter evacuated after FBI incinerates meth at facility
That sounds like it wasn't a method specific issue, and if anything had been burnt in that incinerator it would've caused the same issue.
Sounds like the facility wasn't setup right, any facility with an incinerator should definitely have positive pressure, not negative.
So we're blaming the facility that has never had any issues incinerating previous to this event, rather than the FBI for their clear incompetence? And y'all are not only buying but upvoting it, too? Okay.
The article has not stated who was responsible for operation of the facility.
It's more likely the responsibility was on the staff to ensure the equipment at their own facility was functioning right
This sort of error should have been covered by prior operation licensing checks, a facility with an incinerator on premises shouldn't have negative pressure issues
So something somehow caused a negative pressure issue.
Usually the culprit is some kind of exhaust fan being run, or a door being left open too long
Based on time of year and how hot out it is, I wonder if a staff member left a door propped open or something.
Incinerator systems need positive pressure overall.
Anyone who lives in the north and has a gas based furnace heating system knows how deadly negative air pressure can be...
.... Why are they incinerating there in the first place though. I would figure that government entities would have procedures on confiscating, labeling, storing, and disposing of evidence in a safe manner. Not just throw it in the local animal shelters incinerator lol.
I know that when police in my area need to destroy evidence that's no longer needed (and can't just be disposed of in normal waste streams, or sold or what have you) they normally take it to a local garbage incineration plant.
There was also a steel mill in the area at one point and their furnace was occasionally been put to use for similar purposes (tangential - there was at least one instance I've heard of where the US mint used that furnace to dispose of a batch of coins they were testing a new alloy or process or something on)
Maybe in the area of Montana they were limited in choices, thought this place would do, but did not do a test run to ensure ventilation, leading to terrible results. Perhaps the unit was seldom used and poorly maintained (the fact that there were kittens in the same room as the incinerator seems crazy to me)
Read the article:
Yes, it just seems like a comedy of errors here, unfortunately the animals and staff suffered the price
Or the FBI just wanted to kill some puppies. Which does seem pretty in character.