Minnesota: Couple unknowingly buys house from meth lab cook

August 28, 2009 by Meth Lab Homes · 2 Comments 

krista-kellerAll that Kristi and Justin Keller wanted was a home to call their own, where they could someday raise a family of their own. After years of saving their money for a down payment, they Read more

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Indiana: The Sabatino meth lab home story

August 27, 2009 by Meth Lab Homes · Leave a Comment 

In 2006,  Julie McCoy Sabatino bought a small two-story house in Churubusco, Indiana, an affordable home where she dreamed of happy days together with her 10 year old son.  But, health problems began, just a few weeks after Read more

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Single mom Andrea Wagner buys contaminated meth lab home

July 26, 2009 by Meth Lab Homes · 2 Comments 

wagner-familyStow, Ohio: Andrea Wagner bought a meth lab home on Meadowbrook Boulevard for $147,000,in January 2006, not knowing that she was buying a home contaminated with meth lab chemicals. The seller, who bought the home at a Sheriff’s auction never told her Read more

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Arkansas: The Cornell family meth lab home

July 19, 2009 by Meth Lab Homes · 2 Comments 

McRae, Arkansas: Hazel and Clarence Cornell lived in a trailer for a year, after they found out that the home they bought in 2001 had once been used as a meth lab.  Soon after they bought a new home where they hoped to spend their retirement years, health problems began.  Read more

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Meth lab pictures for renters, realtors, home owners, home buyers

July 16, 2009 by Meth Lab Homes · 11 Comments 

Pictures of meth labs can help renters and home owners can help them identify a meth lab home, just by observing the inside and outside of the home. Pictures are not the only way to identify a meth lab however, as there is no standard situation when it comes to meth labs. But, these pictures may help you to become familiar with some of what you might see inside and outside of a property that is being used or has been used to manufacture methamphetamine.

This is by no means a complete list and is only presented here as another tool to help you identify a “possible” meth lab scene. If you do not see any similarities between these pictures and your home, you should not assume that your home was never a meth lab. If neighbors tell you that they suspect that the previous occupants of your home had drug problems, listen to what they’re telling you! Also, call the police and the health department and ask them if they have any records about your home.

Keep in mind that meth lab clean up contractors say that very few homes that have been used to make meth have ever been busted and/or placed on a quarantined list.

Neighbors may, in fact know more about a house and its occupants, than the police or the health department.  Talk to neighbors who have lived in the neighborhood for a long time – the longer the better.

Lastly, know that the only way to positively identify meth contamination in your house is to have the home tested  for the chemicals used to make meth.

Chemical stains on flooring

Chemical staining on walls and floors often result when chemicals spill during the meth cook.  Floors and carpets are often stained or damaged by meth chemicals that can include liquids such as hydrochloric acid. A former meth lab may also have brand new flooring and carpets, which can signal that the previous flooring was damaged because of meth lab chemical spills.

Fixer-upper buyers beware! Also, keep in mind that meth lab homes may look brand new and not show any of the damages you see in the pictures listed here. Unscrupulous sellers who buy meth lab homes at rock bottom prices often cover stains with carpeting and new flooring and paint walls to minimize any questions or concerns about the home from prospective buyers or renters.

meth lab chemical stains on hardwood floor

stained-rug1

Burned grass or vegetation

Meth lab cooks may cook meth outdoors or burn empty pseudoephedrine packages or blister packaging for cold, allergy, and sinus medicines, to avoid raising the suspicion of anyone seeing the tell-tale meth signs in their trash. Cooking outdoors is remote locations in another way to avoid being detected by neighbors who may smell the chemicals they’re cooking. Cooking outdoors also keeps their homes from getting contaminated or exposing their children to the hazardous chemicals they’re cooking with.  If you see burn pits, stained soil or dead vegetation it may indicate areas where meth lab chemicals have been dumped.

meth lab burns grass

Kitty Litter

Kitty Litter is often used by meth lab cooks to soak up spilled chemicals.  In the first picture, a meth lab cook uses this kitty litter container as part of their meth manufacturing process. Tubing is commonly found at meth labs, where it is often connected to a variety of containers.

kitty-litter-strange-connections

Do you see kitty litter in unusual locations? It could indicate that someone used it to absorb a chemical spill.

kitty-litter-in-strange-places

Housekeeping

When someone is addicted to meth, meth is ALL THAT MATTERS.  The effect of meth on users makes it difficult for them to get organized and keep the kind of focus it would take to keep their house neat and tidy.

Renters who are using meth and/or making meth will try to avoid having their landlord come in to inspect their home, due to its condition and to prevent the landlord from seeing anything that might evoke questions.  Neighbors and other visitors are also avoided by meth lab cooks, for the same reasons.

Windows  are often  covered or blacked-out to keep prying eyes from seeing inside.

Living conditions in a meth lab home

bathroom of a meth lab home

living conditions in a meth lab home

Strange Plumbing

Strange plumbing, vent systems, and/or  electrical connections in a house should make you question why someone would have a plumbing, wiring, or electrical system like that in their house, basement, attic, or garage. Could the plumbing be installed to make it easier to dump chemicals without being detected by anyone outside of the house?

plumbing-strange

Could venting systems be installed in basements to vent out meth lab fumes? Are electrical outlets or wiring found in weird places?

vents-strange1

Glassware

Police often find different types of  glassware in meth labs, including glass bottles, jugs, and glass cooking containers.

glassware

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Knoxville, TN: Homeowner faces cleanup charges after 6 men use home as meth lab

April 13, 2009 by Meth Lab Homes · Leave a Comment 

Six men were charged with the initiation of the process to manufacture methamphetamine in a West Knox County home on Wednesday, as Knox County deputies were serving an arrest warrant for one of the men. The suspects, who are assumed innocent until proven guilty, include Johnny Parker Lane, 43, Ron Walter Austin 32, Russell Lee Jarrard, 36, William Matthew Allison, 26, Aaron D. Lawhorn, 27, and Joe Akins, 29.

PhotobucketThe arrest came as the result of deputies finding a meth lab located in the basement of the home located at 830 Kevin Road. The owner of the home does not live at the home, but will be responsible to pay a cleanup contractor, certified by the Knox County Health Department to test and decontaminate the home, as required by TN law.

Free on Bond

Lane, 43, was released after posting a $10,000 bond.

William Allison, 26, was released after posting a $4,000 bond.

Aaron D. Lawhorn, 27, was released after posting a $10,000 bond.

Joe Akins, 29, was released after posting a $4,000 bond. His previous offenses involved burglary, theft, aggravated burglary, driving without a license.

Still in Jail

Ron Austin, 32,  is being held at the request of Anderson County. He has a previous record that includes theft and possession of drug paraphernalia.

Russell Lee Jarrard, 36, is being held on a $10,000 bond. He has previous criminal record that includes assault and vandalism.

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Colorado Health Department tells home owner to use bulldozer on his meth lab home

January 3, 2009 by Meth Lab Homes · Leave a Comment 

Tim Young’s realtor told him that the home he was thinking about buying from them had once been a meth lab. But, they also told him that it had been cleaned and it was perfectly safe to live in. It wasn’t.

Tim has asked me to share his meth lab home experience with you through his words and pictures.  His hope is that by sharing his story, others might be able to avoid the tremendous losses that he and his mother have had to endure.

Here is Tim Young’s experience with meth lab homes, in his own words. Read more

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National Clandestine Meth Lab Registries: Facts and Fiction

October 27, 2008 by Meth Lab Homes · Comments Off 

I’m thinking about buying a home, but worry that it might have been a former meth lab. I’ve already checked the DEA website list of meth lab busts and I don’t see it listed there. Is it safe for me to buy it?

If a home or apartment that you are thinking about buying or renting has not been recorded by the DEA, DO NOT assume that the home was never used as a meth lab. The government does not require states to provide them with meth lab bust information, so the list provided by the DEA should not be considered complete.

*If you are searching for a meth lab home on the Internet, keep this in mind: Read more

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Contaminated Meth lab homes still being sold in Colorado

May 6, 2008 by Meth Lab Homes · Leave a Comment 

CBS4 reports that some Coloradans may not know they are living in former meth lab:

“Some Coloradans may be living in a home that once contained a drug lab and not even know it. As part of a year-long investigation, CBS4 News has obtained, through open records requests, governmental lists of properties that contained methamphetamine labs that were never cleaned up. CBS4 Investigator Rick Sallinger found people living in homes that may still be contaminated with meth. Governmental agencies failed to inform them, and unscrupulous homeowners sold the properties without warning Read more

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Meth Lab home clues that you should know

November 30, 2007 by Meth Lab Homes · 4 Comments 

Meth labs can be set up just about anywhere. They’ve been found in cars, trailers, homes, hotel rooms, and outdoors. Increasingly, meth cooks are using a technique known as the “one-pot” method which doesn’t require a heat source. When you’re shopping for a new home or looking for a new apartment, be on the alert for signs of a meth lab.

Here are some signs that you should look for: Read more

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