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Bho Disasters (PLEASE READ!)

jump /injack

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Here is a real sad story. The grandson has in the basement a BHO operation that could have blown this beautiful old home to pieces and set his Grandmother's and Grandfather's hair on fire. But fortunately the cops and fire department get there first and save the old homestead.....well, its not quite like that, the house could have blown up but that's not all, here is the sad tale of woe.


UPDATE: Six charged in raid of alleged Westford drug lab
By Melissa Hanson, [email protected]
Updated: 06/08/2016 07:55:58 PM EDT

WESTFORD — In the basement of a more than $800,000 home at the end of a long driveway in an upscale neighborhood, authorities allege that a family and two other women were manufacturing drugs, police said Wednesday.

Around 8:45 a.m. Wednesday, police and Drug Enforcement Administration officers entered the home at 2 Mountain View Lane via a search warrant, leading five out in handcuffs: Homeowner Bradley C. Heath, his son Bradley C. Heath II, his daughter Linley M. Heath, the younger Heath's girlfriend Lyndsey T. Holston, and friend Prachi S. Joglekar, according to Westford police. Diana Heath, wife of the elder Bradley and mother to the younger Bradley and Linley, was not home in the morning, and surrendered herself to police later in the day.

At their arraignment in Ayer District Court Wednesday afternoon, attorney Jeff Higgins painted the Heath parents and daughter as a family who worked hard. He said that the Heath couple, who have been married for 35 years, each work two jobs to support themselves, and that their daughter works as a bartender. He said that the younger Heath had a medical-marijuana card for anxiety.

But prosecutors alleged that there was a “highly volatile” clandestine lab in the Heath home basement, where butane honey oil, a concentrated form of THC, one of the drugs found in marijuana, was being produced and sold.

According to court documents, the younger Heath, 22, made drug transactions in the driveway of his home while his parents were outside, discovered by police via surveillance.

The allegations Wednesday sparked the attention of neighbors who went outside to look at the home, and drivers, who cruised down the street to get a look at the police action, a surprising sight among the pristine houses and tree-lined streets.

Because this charge violates the younger Heath's probation from a previous drug charge, he is being detained. Bail was going to be set at $30,000, for charges of manufacturing a Class C substance, distribution of a Class C substance (THC), possession with intent to distribute a Class C substance, possession with intent to distribute a Class D substance (marijuana), possession of a Class B substance (crack cocaine), conspiracy to violate drug laws, and operating after a license suspension.

Charged with manufacturing a Class C substance, possession with intent to distribute a Class C substance, and conspiracy to violate drug laws were Bradley C. Heath Sr., 63; Diana Heath, 61, Linley Heath, 28; Holston, 20, 18 York Ave., Westford; and Joglekar, 22, 52 Pacer Way, Groton. Holston was additionally charged with distribution of a Class C substance, and was held on $1,000 cash bail. The four other suspects were held on $500 cash bail.

At least Linley and Diana Heath had posted bail Wednesday afternoon.

While in court, Diana Heath buried her face in her hands, while the other members of the Heath family tried to shield their faces from reporters with cameras.

Westford police Capt. Victor Neal said more arrests are possible.

The younger Bradley Heath was arrested in 2013 on charges of possession of a Class B drug. The disposition of that case was not immediately available. Linley Heath is currently facing an operating-under-the-influence charge out of district court, prosecutors said.

Multiple forms of surveillance were used to watch the home over a period of months, according to Police Chief Thomas McEnaney. Confidential informants were also used in the investigation, court records say. According to town assessor records, 2 Mountain View Lane is owned by Bradley Heath and Diana Heath and valued at $829,000.

Upon entry to the home Wednesday morning, authorities found a vacuum oven, allegedly for producing the butane honey oil, also known as “dabs.” The younger Heath allegedly sold the drug in envelopes that said “Gold Street Extracts.” Prosecutors said about $4,000 worth, or 80 grams, of the THC oil was found in the house, as well as more than 8 pounds of marijuana, valued at about $25,000. When authorities entered the home, they said a smell of marijuana and butane was overwhelming, leading them to dispatch a hazardous materials team and the state police bomb squad, police and documents said.

Neal said a puppy was also found in the home, and that the dog may be put in the custody of Animal Control.

A line of black law-enforcement vehicles left the house around 1 p.m. after going in and out of the house's garage and front door. Garbage barrels remained at the end of the home's driveway, still full with trash. An American flag waved off the porch of the yellow house.

The investigation is ongoing. Neal said this is the first drug lab discovered in Westford.

Doug Flint, who lives on nearby Swanson Lane, said it's not a good feeling to that this happened in his neighborhood. He said his son went to school with Linley Heath, but that he did not know the Heath family.

Selectman Don Siriani tweeted that the arrests were “outstanding work” for a “dangerous illegal home drug operation.”

This is not the first time that such a drug manufacturing lab has been found in Greater Lowell. In March 2014, a buildup of butane vapors likely used for THC extraction caused an explosion and fire at a house on Astle Street in Tewksbury.

Take a look at the house they just might lose
: http://www.lowellsun.com/breakingnews/ci_29991881/five-arrested-authorities-bust-westford-drug-lab
 

jump /injack

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Here is two that happened, one in Colorado and the other in Oakland Ca.



#1. Small explosion, fire, at Lakewood hotel, hash oil suspected

A small explosion and fire inside a Lakewood hotel room is being investigated as an illegal hash-oil cook.

The incident happened at about 5 p.m. at the Crossland Hotel, 715 Kipling St., said West Metro Fire Rescue spokeswoman Ronda Scholting.

Authorities said there was a series of small explosions in a second-floor room. When firefighters arrived, they extinguished a fire in Room 211, containing the blaze to the lone room.

Two men suffered minor injuries and the three-story building was partially evacuated.

An investigation is ongoing, Scholting said, but early indications point to a hash oil explosion.

#2 OAKLAND (BCN)— Two men suffered second-degree burns in a two-alarm fire that started when an oxygen tank exploded Tuesday afternoon in an East Oakland duplex, a fire battalion chief said.

The fire was first reported at 3:21 p.m. near 76th Avenue and Hillside Street, a few blocks from the Eastmont Town Center.

The fire destroyed one unit and damaged the other. In all, the fire did about $600,000 in damage to the structure, Battalion Chief Ian McWhorter said.

A hazardous materials team was called because firefighters found butane, which is used in the production of hash oil - an illegal drug that has effects similar to marijuana.

Explosions are not uncommon when people are making hash oil.

Police did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

The explosion occurred in a bedroom, McWhorter said. Firefighters first thought the fire required a smaller one-alarm response, but the fire was upgraded to two alarms before 3:51 p.m.
 

jump /injack

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http://fox40.com/2016/06/09/honey-o...-her-story-warns-others-about-dangerous-drug/



Honey Oil Explosion Survivor Shares Her Story, Warns Others about Dangerous Drug


SACRAMENTO -- She was a bright-eyed 25-year-old with a big voice, but Cassandra Pratt made a bad decision that left her burned and confined to a hospital bed.

Almost a year later, the single mother is surviving but struggling after a butane honey oil explosion last August.

Now she's reliving those terrifying moments.

"I remember a blue light and then something exploded," Pratt said.

She was at a Yuba City home with friends making the drug when the explosion turned her world upside down.

Pratt can't escape the emotional scars and the physical ones are scattered throughout her body.

"Every time I can't open something, every time I go to pick my son up and I'm in pain. There' s not one second that goes by I don't think about it," Pratt said.

She is also filled with frustration because she didn't know the dangers of manufacturing the cannabis extract.

"For the past 3 to 4 years we would be describing the number of butane honey oil incidents at an epidemic level," said Vic Massenkoff, fire investigator with the Contra Costa Fire Protection District.

Massenkoff is an expert on honey oil fires.

He's focused on training firefighters and raising awareness about honey oil explosions.

Helmet cam video shows firefighters rushing into intense flames ignited by butane that seeped into the air; consequences of someone manufacturing the potent drug.

"Honey oil is made in a hand-held extraction tube similar to this pipe," Masenkoff said.

Known as honey oil, butane hash oil or dabs, the cannabis extract is made with a PVC pipe, marijuana, a pyrex and refined butane which is sold in bulk online. It's cheap and sales are unregulated.

The vapor is clear, odorless and extremely explosive.

"The ignited vapors from this small can of butane can fill a 1500 square foot house," said Masenkoff.

Jim Doucette is the Executive Director of the Firefighters Burn Institute in Sacramento.

"It's devastating and it's in people's neighborhoods it's in apartment buildings and you're not gonna know it," Doucette said.

He doesn't have the exact number of explosions and deaths due to honey oil fires because it hasn't been tracked.

Doucette wants that the change with the public's help, because it's affecting innocent people.

"It increases our work a great amount," said Dr. Daivd Greenhalgh, Chief of Burns at UC David Burn Center and Shriners Hospital.

Last year the burn units at UC David Medical Center and Shriners admitted about 30 people suffering injuries from butane or hash oil

That's about one in 20 patients.

Dr. Greenhalgh says burns from honey oil explosions are often much more severe than others.

"Someone comes with 80 percent burns you got somebody who's got a bed occupied for 3, 4, 5, 6 months," Dr. Greenhalgh said.

Cassandra Pratt spent four weeks recovering at UC Davis' burn center and she wants to come back one day in a different role.

"I want to be a nurse, a burn nurse actually," Pratt said.

The 25-year-old is looking toward a brighter future; rebuilding a life forever scarred.

All because no one gave her this warning:

"It's no good, it's not worth it, just don’t, you could die," said Pratt.

Because of her injuries Pratt may never be able to sing like she once did.

Instead she's using her voice to spread a message that might save a life.
 

jump /injack

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http://www.dailycamera.com/news/bou...der-police-arrest-suspect-broker-inn-hash-oil

Boulder police arrest suspect in Broker Hotel hash oil explosion
By Mitchell Byars



Boulder police last weekend arrested the man accused of causing a hash oil explosion at the Rodeway Inn & Suites Boulder Broker Hotel in April — an arrest delayed by almost two months after a hospital released him without notifying investigators. Jonathan Tarr, 34, initially was detained by police on April 20, but was then taken to get medical treatment

Staff at the University of Colorado Hospital mistakenly discharged Tarr without notifying police, according to Boulder police spokeswoman Shannon Cordingly.

Police obtained a warrant, and Tarr was arrested Sunday by police responding to a narcotics complaint near 21st Street and Canyon Boulevard, Cordingly said.

Tarr faces counts of first- and fourth-degree arson, unlawful extraction of marijuana concentrate, criminal mischief, reckless endangerment, drug possession and failure to comply charges.

He also is facing charges of drug possession and attempt to influence an official in connection with the narcotics complaint on Sunday.

Tarr is being held at the Boulder County Jail on $100,000 bond.

He is suspected of causing a blast at the former Broker Inn, 555 30th St., on April 13. Police confirmed the explosion was a result of the highly volatile practice of butane hash oil extraction.


Police said it appeared the people in the room had been extracting the oil in the bathroom.The explosion took down the wall between the bathroom and the rest of the room before blowing out the window and the door.

Police at the time said nobody was injured in the blast, though one Broker Inn employee hurt an ankle while evacuating.

According to an arrest affidavit, witnesses saw a man later identified as Tarr "acting crazy," and telling people to call police near the room shortly after the explosion. One witness said Tarr grabbed a black duffel bag from the room and was spotted by another witness leaving the building with burns on his hands.

The woman who was renting the room — who police noted had no burn injuries — said Tarr was a transient friend of hers who would occasionally use the room. She said she had previously seen him carrying around butane, which is used in the hash oil extraction process.

Tarr's prints and cellphone were also found at the scene, according to the affidavit.

Tarr was located on April 20 in the 2000 block of Hermosa Drive.

He has a previous criminal history in Colorado, Georgia and Wyoming that includes arrests for robbery, assault and various drug-related charges, according to the affidavit.

The cost of the damage was estimated to be $10,000.

Hash oil is made by running butane or another solvent through a tube filled with dried marijuana clippings, leaving behind an oily liquid that can be solidified by heating the mixture to evaporate the butane.

But the process is volatile and can result in explosions if the room being used is not properly ventilated, and is illegal without the proper permits.
 

jump /injack

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http://www.pressdemocrat.com/news/5740175-181/sonoma-county-agencies-coordinate-raids?artslide=0


Sonoma County agencies coordinate raids on cannabis oil labs

JULIE JOHNSON

THE PRESS DEMOCRAT | June 15, 2016, 9:59AM

Sonoma County law enforcement officers raided five properties Wednesday morning associated with two well-known local cannabis product brands, halting work and seizing equipment at a Santa Rosa laboratory used to make therapeutic cannabis products used by patients throughout the state.

Authorities arrested a Rohnert Park man with a history of evading arrest who they said is an owner behind the brands Absolute Xtracts and Care By Design. Santa Rosa police officials said Dennis Franklin Hunter, 43, ran an extensive concentrated cannabis oil production operation that appeared to use illegal and hazardous production methods and was in violation of a variety of city codes.

Hunter was being held on $5 million bail Wednesday at the Sonoma County Jail on suspicion of felony manufacturing a controlled substance — a high bail because of his history of evading police, Lt. Mike Lazzarini said, including a four-year stint on the lam on an illegal pot production charge.

But Nick Caston, a spokesman for the Care By Design line of medical marijuana oil-infused sprays and gel caps and Absolute Xtracts cannabis oil cartridges for electronic cigarettes, said they are legal businesses and do not use volatile chemicals banned by state law in the cannabis oil extraction process.

“We produce medicine as determined by the voters in the 1990s, and we do it with the best practices of any company in the state,” said Caston.

The family of brands were founded in 2014 under a cooperative called CBD Guild, which stands for cannabidiol, which like its better known counterpart THC is one of many active ingredients in cannabis. The CBD Guild provides products for “thousands” of patients “at dispensaries in every major town in the state, from San Diego north,” said Caston.

Caston has worked as a political consultant and said he serves as volunteer CEO of the Leadership Institute for Ecology and the Economy. He was formerly married to current Santa Rosa City Councilwoman Erin Carlstrom.

Caston declined to share information about its finances because it operates as a collective and is technically owned by the patients.

Hunter was arrested on a federal warrant in 2002 for illegal pot production — a 12,000-plant farm in Humboldt County, which local officials at the time said was the county’s largest — after spending four years on the run.

He was handed a 5½-year federal prison term, which he served. In 2013, he was again the center of a manhunt, this time in Arkansas after U.S. Homeland Security officials asked local deputies to detain him at Little Rock airport because they suspected he had drugs on the private plane. But, he escaped in the plane after refueling with deputies approaching. He eventually turned himself in.

Caston characterized Hunter’s past as an element of being among pioneers in California’s marijuana industry as it continues to move toward increased legality.

“They’re the folks that have been leading the way, breaking down the stigma, breaking down the misconceptions,” he said. “He’s really a visionary, along with the other folks in our company, trying to bring practices that are safe. This (law enforcement) action is very surprising.”

A primary legal question is whether the lab workers were using butane gas to produce concentrated cannabis oil — a practice strictly banned in California.

Caston was emphatic they did not use butane gas.

CBD Guild’s current laboratory is in a 34,000-square-foot space at an upscale business park on Circadian Way in west Santa Rosa. It uses specially designed high-pressured carbon dioxide devices to extract oil from marijuana, Caston said.

He said several 4-foot-high cannisters police found in warehouses on Chestnut Street near Olive Park and on Standish Avenue just outside the city limits were left over from an abandoned “R&D project” from at least two years ago.

“It was abandoned for all the concerns we’re all aware of,” Caston said.

He was referring to the volatile nature of butane gas, which can be used to extract oil from cannabis. But the gas is highly flammable and has caused a spate of house fires across Santa Rosa and the country, mostly with makeshift “Breaking Bad”-style labs.

Lazzarini said officers will investigate how the cannisters of butane gas were being used. He said the process used at the main laboratory, which Caston claims is legal, is not lawful.


“This is one of those areas where the courts are going to have to decide,” Lazzarini said. “From a law enforcement standpoint this is not a legal process when it involves processes that are dangerous.”

Santa Rosa attorney Joe Rogoway, who represents the guild, said police were mischaracterizing the nature of the business, which he said was transparent and lawful cannabis oil production.

“They weren’t using butane, they use a process that includes CO2 which is a flame retardant; CO2 is what’s in fire extinguishers,” Rogoway said. “It’s not criminalized in California law.”

Rogoway said the guild suspects a disgruntled former employee made false claims to law enforcement after he left the organization, and that led to the raids.

Rogoway said the guild received a zoning permit from the city in January spelling out that the laboratory would include carbon dioxide extractors “and other extraction methods.” But the zoning clearance paperwork from the city dated Jan. 28, 2016 and viewed by a reporter does not mention medical marijuana or concentrated cannabis.

Clare Hartman, deputy director of the city’s planning department, said while the zoning permit allowed the organization to manufacture essential oils using carbon dioxide extraction, the city’s code currently explicitly excludes any manufacturing of marijuana. The city is currently seeking to draft an ordinance that would allow it, but that hasn’t been done.

“If we are going to permit the processing of marijuana we will be explicit about that,” she said. “This permit does not grant them that right.”

Hartman said the applicants were supposed to request a building inspection before production began, but no request was on record with the city and no inspection was done.

Santa Rosa Fire Marshal Scott Moon said he spent hours Wednesday evaluating the Circadian Way laboratory and found many code problems, including improper storage of hazardous materials such as ethanol and accumulation of hazardous waste.

Santa Rosa police teamed up with Sonoma County Sheriff’s deputies and U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents to conduct coordinated searches of five properties in the city and county affiliated with the group, Lazzarini said.

About 100 law enforcement officers broke into teams Wednesday morning and searched various properties associated with the organization, including the laboratory on Circadian Way, warehouses on Chestnut Street and Standish Avenue, a rural property with several greenhouses on Irwin Lane and Hunter’s residence on Golf Course Drive in Rohnert Park, where he was arrested. Lazzarini said Hunter cooperated and didn’t try to flee.

Only two other people were arrested at the properties Wednesday, and both were cited and released for misdemeanor cocaine possession. Caston said cocaine possession violates the organization’s code of conduct.

Rogoway said medical marijuana advocates plan a rally in support of the guild at 11 a.m. Thursday outside the Sonoma County Superior Courthouse.
 

Chimera

Genetic Resource Management
Veteran
I visited the Absolute Xtracts / Care by Design lab and cultivation site with Rob Clarke and a bunch of industry folks.

They make oil via supercritical CO2 extraction, not butane extraction. They also have a full lab on site with HPLC for quantifying cannabinoids, and produce clones for production via tissue culture. Hardly a fly by night 'drug operation', they are probably one of the only companies the state making accurately formulated medicines- including 1:1 CBD:THC and 18:1 CBD:THC gel caps and sublingual sprays in coconut oil, chocolate covered almonds, various dosed edibles and of course the Absolute and Care By Design CO2 extract cartridges.

With legalization coming around the corner, and the new regulations for medical production in California, this makes very little sense. These guys were doing it right...
 
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Chimera

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Nothing illegal about legal researchers touring facilities in a legal state...
 

jump /injack

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http://patch.com/california/banning-beaumont/man-arrested-following-explosion-moreno-valley

Man Arrested Following Explosion In Moreno Valley
The 44-year-old reportedly was manufacturing concentrated cannabis.


MORENO VALLEY, CA -- A man was arrested for multiple alleged felonies including manufacturing concentrated cannabis following an explosion at a residence in Moreno Valley, authorities said Saturday.

James Wall, 44, of Moreno Valley, was booked at the Robert Presley Detention Center in Riverside for manufacturing concentrated cannabis, possession and cultivation of cannabis for sale, and causing a fire, according to the Riverside County Sheriff's Department.

Deputies responded to an explosion around 9 a.m. Friday at a home in the 27200 block of Darlene Drive. Five people were quickly evacuated from the home before anybody was injured, but the structure was partially destroyed, according to the RCSD.

Authorities noticed materials in the home consistent with a butane honey oil lab. "Honey oil" is concentrated cannabis that can be extracted with butane. The process is considered dangerous because butane is highly flammable.
 

jump /injack

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http://www.northdevonjournal.co.uk/...n-front-room/story-29477751-detail/story.html

Butane explodes for other reasons than what is ordinarily shown at this site


​Regional: Devon family's lucky escape as five gas canisters explode in front room

By North Devon Journal | Posted: July 05, 2016


A family had a lucky escape after being awoken in their home by a large explosion, caused by five butane containers left close to a night storage heater.

The day before the family, from Exeter, had been drying and packing camping equipment before storing it in their front room.

While packing the equipment away, the night storage heater in the front room was accidently switched on. The family then packed their camping equipment up against the heater.

Unfortunately within the equipment were five butane gas cooking canisters which were resting tight up against the night storage heater, over night the heater switched on from 11pm to 7am.

The heat transferred by conduction from the heater to the gas canisters causing the gas to heat up within the canisters, once the pressure became too great, the pressure release design of the canisters activated releasing the butane from the canisters into the front room.

Butane is a gas that is heavier than air and it accumulated within the closed front room awaiting a source of ignition - which came at 7am when the economy 7 night storage system switched itself off, this electrical switch was enough ignite the butane causing a gas explosion blowing out the front rooms double glazing and igniting the camping equipment.

Luckily the owner was able to use a garden hose e to suppress fire crews from Danes Castle & Middlemoor were called

A fire service spokesman said: "This example of a series of unfortunate events leading to a gas explosion highlights the risk however unlikely.

"The gas canisters were not faulty nor was the night storage system however the combination of a heat source, flammable gases and an ignition spark resulted in a gas explosion which could have had far more serious consequences for the family."

Station manager Nigel Deasy said: "This fire was a result of a number of unforeseen accidental actions which combined together resulted in a butane gas explosion.

"I would like to ask the public to check their camping equipment and to separate their flammable camping gases ensuring that they store them outside of their property, ideally in a secure place."
 

blastfrompast

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Just had a Boom here in MB...Selkirk to be exact...

19 and a 28yr old I believe. Open blasting in the bathroom..... when the hell are they going to learn...

Too boot there was a 6month old baby in the house...
A friend lives a block away and heard the boom, and the commotion afterwords (lifted the ceiling 6 inches or so)

both are 80-90% covered in burns....
 

jump /injack

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http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/kitch...an-charged-waterloo-house-explosion-1.3694152


Wilmot man charged with arson following Waterloo house explosion in April
Police believe man was attempting to extract cannabis resin using butane

CBC News Posted: Jul 25, 2016 1:44 PM ET Last Updated: Jul 25, 2016 3:35 PM ET
Google Street View of house at 97 Christopher Drive, Waterloo

A 37-year-old Wilmot Township man who suffered major burns in a home explosion in Waterloo in April has been charged with arson.

The man was inside the home at 97 Christopher Drive in Waterloo at 4:40 p.m. on April 30 when there was an explosion and subsequent fire. The home was destroyed.

Man remains in critical condition from suspicious fire, explosion

A man found inside the home had significant burns to a large portion of his body. He was airlifted to a Hamilton burn unit in critical condition.

During an investigation, police found approximately 25 plastic caps from butane canisters and filter papers in the backyard of the home.

"Investigators believe this fire was caused by the extraction of cannabis resin using butane. Butane is a highly explosive and volatile substance - this incident is an example of the extreme danger involved in manufacturing illegal drugs," police said in a release.
97 Christopher Drive Waterloo

The home at 97 Christopher Drive was destroyed, police say. (Google Maps)

The owners of the home were not there at the time. Police said they are not believed to be involved in any offences; however, they know the accused. Police did not say how the owners of the home and the man know each other.

The 37-year-old man has been charged with production of a controlled substance and arson.
 

jump /injack

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http://kdvr.com/2016/07/25/2-people-hurt-in-nederland-house-fire-reports-say/


2 people hurt in ‘suspicious’ Nederland house fire
Posted 6:20 pm, July 25, 2016, by Web Staff, Updated at 05:44am, July 26, 2016


NEDERLAND, Colo. -- A house caught fire on Monday night, injuring two people, that might have started by a hash oil explosion, the Nederland Fire Department said.

Witnesses reported an explosion at the house at 99 Alpine Drive about 5 p.m.

Firefighters worked hard pouring water on the stubborn fire as flames shot through the roof and above the trees to try to keep it from spreading beyond the house.

"I can't really comment now but it's a little suspicious that there's (propane) tanks blowing off (in the house)," Nederland Fire Volunteer Capt. Eric Abramson told the Boulder Daily Camera. "We probably suspect some sort of illegal behavior."

Abramson told the newspaper the two people who were injured were airlifted to a hospital in Denver.

"The two people hospitalized had gotten out (of the house)," he told the newspaper. "You can make your own conclusion (about their condition) when they get flown by helicopter to the burn unit."


If you don't know what a 2nd or 3rd degree burn will do you must look, Google the burns up and take a look. Burn injuries are measured in weeks and months for healing but the time in jail will be measured in years and the money expended in attorney fee's can never be recouped. Use closed systems, adequate ventilation, a plan for disaster and don't ever do this in your domicile, make sure that you've read "Gray Wolf's" safety rules in the stickies. A Butane fireball at the instant of detonation is over 3400F degrees, it will melt steel wear protective clothing for fire.

Just noticed that this is the 100th page of warnings. People still getting fried, burned and roasted using butane as an extraction agent. Use a closed system in a commercially zoned area away from residential units use "Gray Wolf's" safety rules and you will decrease your chances of becoming a burn patient and a convict.
 
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jump /injack

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http://www.glasgowlive.co.uk/news/glasgow-news/super-strength-cannabis-made-using-11708597


Super strength cannabis made using butane gas caused massive explosion at Tollcross flat

10:56, 5 Aug 2016
Updated 19:04, 5 Aug 2016
By Gillian Loney

Highly dangerous method of producing super strength cannabis did this to Glasgow flat


A man has been jailed for more than six years for sparking a fire in a Tollcross tenement where he was using a flat as drug lab.

Scott Peden, 30, had been making a super-strength form of cannabis called Shatter in his girlfriend’s flat when he caused an explosion, setting fire to the tenement building earlier this year - and causing damage estimated at £1 million.

Neighbours had to be rescued from the blaze on March 21, with medics initially fearing two residents would not survive.


It took two hours for firefighters to put out the inferno and eight residents needed hospital treatment for burns, smoke inhalation and carbon monoxide poisoning.

Peden pleaded guilty to culpable and reckless conduct and a charge of producing a controlled drug.


Judge Lord Armstrong said he had shown “gross irresponsibility” and sentenced him to six years and four months in jail.

Detective Inspector David Stewart, of Shettleston CID, said: "When emergency services attended at the scene of the incident at Fairburn Street they were faced with scenes of absolute carnage.

"There were a number of injured people at the scene following the explosion which had ripped through the front window of the tenement."

He said an investigation by specialist officers and the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service found that Peden had been manufacturing Shatter, or Butane Honey Oil.

"The dangers of this process are well documented, considering the manufacturing process," said Mr Stewart.

"Butane gas was passed over herbal cannabis in a pressurised environment. A number of other butane canisters were stored in the flat.

"An explosion followed as a result of his idiocy.

"I cannot emphasise enough the stupidity of his selfish actions.

"It borders on the miraculous that his neighbours, his friends within the flat and Peden himself were not more seriously injured, or indeed killed, as a consequence."
 

jump /injack

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http://www.record-bee.com/article/NQ/20160809/NEWS/160809841

Drug lab explosion leaves Lakeport man severely burned


Lakeport >> Fumes from a butane hash oil lab caused an explosion that ignited a fire and left a man seriously injured Friday.

The 21-year-old unidentified burn victim remains at the UC Davis Medical Center as of Tuesday afternoon, Lakeport Police Chief Brad Rasmussen said in a press release.

“Butane hash oil labs are extremely dangerous to the persons operating them, their surrounding neighbors and first responders including police and firefighters,” he said. “We were lucky in this case that additional persons were not injured or killed and that other surrounding property including buildings and wild land were not burned.”

Investigators found the illegal lab being operated at Anthony’s RV Park inside a travel trailer after they were dispatched to the location at about 4:45 p.m. Friday. They were called in to assist Lakeport Fire Protection District (LFPD) with the man who was severely burned and uncooperative.

Police returned to the scene in the 2300 block of Memory Lane with a search warrant at about 10 p.m. They found and seized 20 pounds of marijuana, hash oil, nearly 100 cans of butane and other items used in producing the concentrated cannabis product, Rasmussen said.

The investigation is ongoing, and police ask that anyone with information contact officers at (707) 263-5491, via a private message on Facebook @LakeportPolice or by sending an anonymous message by texting the words TIP LAKEPORT followed by your message to 888777.
 
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jump /injack

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http://www.record-bee.com/article/NQ/20160809/NEWS/160809841

Drug lab explosion leaves Lakeport man severely burned

By Staff reports

Posted: 08/09/16, 4:15 PM PDT | Updated: 5 days ago
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Lakeport >> Fumes from a butane hash oil lab caused an explosion that ignited a fire and left a man seriously injured Friday.

The 21-year-old unidentified burn victim remains at the UC Davis Medical Center as of Tuesday afternoon, Lakeport Police Chief Brad Rasmussen said in a press release.

“Butane hash oil labs are extremely dangerous to the persons operating them, their surrounding neighbors and first responders including police and firefighters,” he said. “We were lucky in this case that additional persons were not injured or killed and that other surrounding property including buildings and wild land were not burned.”

Investigators found the illegal lab being operated at Anthony’s RV Park inside a travel trailer after they were dispatched to the location at about 4:45 p.m. Friday. They were called in to assist Lakeport Fire Protection District (LFPD) with the man who was severely burned and uncooperative.

Police returned to the scene in the 2300 block of Memory Lane with a search warrant at about 10 p.m. They found and seized 20 pounds of marijuana, hash oil, nearly 100 cans of butane and other items used in producing the concentrated cannabis product, Rasmussen said.
 

Lyfespan

Active member
Just had a Boom here in MB...Selkirk to be exact...

19 and a 28yr old I believe. Open blasting in the bathroom..... when the hell are they going to learn...

Too boot there was a 6month old baby in the house...
A friend lives a block away and heard the boom, and the commotion afterwords (lifted the ceiling 6 inches or so)

both are 80-90% covered in burns....

they will die if 80-90% 3rd degree burns
 

jump /injack

Member
Veteran
The temperature of the tip of a lit cigarette when smoldering is close to 1100 degrees Fahrenheit. The temperature of the tip during a two-second puff can be more than 1600 degrees Fahrenheit. Cigarette tip temperatures are significantly higher than gasoline's autoignition threshold of 495 degrees Fahrenheit.

A butane explosion clocks in at over 3400F degree's say's Gray Wolf, it happens in milliseconds, it happens fast and your in the middle of a fireball that's setting your hair ablaze, melting your eyes and making the fat on your body turn to a flammable substance, your in a world of hurt and will be if you survive for months, maybe years. It will be life changing thing where people turn away from looking at you, don't do this.

Here is some places you can see that 3rd degree burns will do to the unwary, the children, friends and pets: https://www.google.com/search?q=burns+3rd+degree&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8
 

jump /injack

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Veteran
More charges filed in apartment explosion

Marijuana wax > May 9 event involved making of marijuana wax, police say
By Tris DeRoma
Wednesday, August 17, 2016 at 11:55 am

More charges filed in apartment explosion

More charges have been filed in connection to a May 9 apartment explosion at Caballo Peak Apartments in Los Alamos.
Juan Gonzales, 28, was charged with possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute marijuana (first offense). The charge was added to other charges police filed against Gonzales on the day of the explosion.
Those charges include bribery of a witness, two counts of resisting, evading or obstructing an officer.
Police also have accused Gozales’ brother, Joseph Gonzales, of causing the explosion. Police allege that he was attempting to make a substance called “marijuana wax,” a more powerful form of the illegal drug.
According to an online paper published by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, marijuana wax requires large amounts of butane to produce.
The drug distribution charge against Juan Gonzales stemmed from a search warrant issued on the day of the explosion. It was for a car owned by Juan Gonzales and his wife. When the search warrant was executed, police allegedly discovered more than five ounces of marijuana inside the vehicle. They also allegedly found a black duffle bag with marijuana, a weighing scale, several small plastic bags and two mason jars.
Police also confiscated a laptop computer and a cell phone that was inside the vehicle.
According to police, the explosion happened in the early morning hours of May 9. When police arrived on the scene, they encountered Joseph Gonzales, who had a cut foot and several burns on his body. He was transported to a hospital. He was the only one injured in the explosion, police said.
Police determined that the explosion happened when Joseph Gonzales had allegedly been in the apartment bathroom using butane to manufacture marijuana wax.
As of press time, Joseph Gonzales had not been charged, though the Los Alamos Police Department and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms are still investigating the incident.
“Upon investigation of the residence, it was determined that the cause of the explosion was due to Mr. Joseph Gonzales igniting a large amount of butane while in the process of manufacturing marijuana wax,” said LAPD Det. Joseph Robinson in his report.
Police also met with Juan Gonzales, who asked police several times that morning if he could get back into the apartment. Juan Gonzales then left the scene but later came back demanding entry to the apartment to get someone’s medical records. The person had been in the apartment living room at the time of the explosion, but was not injured, police said.
Juan Gonzales demanded the medical records because the person was a diabetic, according to the police report.
When police again refused him, Juan Gonzales allegedly became upset and interfered with police and their investigation of the scene, according to the report. He also allegedly tried to get his sister to tell police that a certain person was never in the apartment.
A later interview with a witness at the scene confirmed to police that Juan Gonzales was in possession of the marijuana and the drug paraphernalia found in the car.
“(The witness) stated Joseph came out of his bedroom on fire. (The witness) stated initially that Joseph handed her a black duffle bag and a lunch box for (the individual), but later stated Juan was the one that handed her the black duffle bag,” said LAPD Deputy Chief Jason Wardlow-Herrera in his report. “(The witness) stated that Juan told her to leave with the black duffle bag and to take (the individual) to his sister’s house before the cops showed up on the scene.”
 
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