Posts Tagged ‘law enforcement organizations’

Advanced Bio Treatment Professionals You Can Trust For Crime Scene Decontamination & Remediation Services

Thursday, July 28th, 2011

By: Advanced Bio Treatment
www.advancedbio-treatment.com

Advanced Bio Treatment operates in sixteen states including Georgia, New York, Virginia, MarylandPennsylvania and Florida. The experience-trained technicians provide services in crime scene cleanup, unattended death cleanup, trauma and accident cleanup, and suicide scene cleanup.  Advanced Bio Treatment crews are trained to handle biohazard remediation and meth lab decontamination, staph infection, MRSA and infectious disease decontamination, foreclosure, hoarding, and urine, feces & odor removal cleanup. All of the work is done according to OSHA and EPA standards. (more…)

The Role of Crime Scene Cleanup Technicians In Evidence Collection

Friday, April 15th, 2011

The homicide cleanup team dispatched a liaison to the detective to consult about the materials they intended to dispose. The homicide cleanup company which frequently did meth lab cleanups as well as odor removal clean ups, suicide scene clean ups and blood scene clean ups followed a protocol which mandated that, before the dispose of any items which may contain evidentiary value for a criminal prosecution, they must consult with the lead officer of an investigation or his designee.

Criminal rules of evidence are quite specific with regard to the development of proof for a criminal case. The police must be able to show the chain of custody of any particular piece of evidence. This means they must establish when and where the physical item was found, how it was stored, who transported it to the police station and where it was kept until the trial. Once a trial is held, a log must be maintained to show when it was checked out, to whom it was given and who is holding it for use at trial.

If the homicide cleanup staff fails to notate when a piece of evidence was found and to whom among the police it was given, this could complicate the prosecution’s task proving its case, and in rare instances, fatally jeopardize the prosecution. To the extent that a homicide cleanup company may rely on its good track record cooperating with the police, a breach of the protocol could cost the homicide cleanup company future business.

This information was originally published as part of the Crime Scene Cleanup blog at http://www.advancedbio-treatment.com/blog. For more insight into the world of crime scene cleanup, follow us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/crime.scene.cleaners.

Legal, Safety and Environmental Considerations of Crime Scene Cleanup

Thursday, March 24th, 2011

The field of crime scene clean up is often practiced by companies that also perform blood, homicide, suicide, meth lab, odor removal and staph infection cleanups.  The perils of improper crime scene clean up include legal, environmental and safety problems.  Finding a company that will manage all of these perils can be difficult.

Beginning in 1969 Congress began legislating large-scale legislative frameworks such as the Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act to address overwhelming problems of pollution and the contamination of lakes and rivers throughout our country. The development of the EPA accelerated the banning and regulation of the discharge of thousands of toxic or hazardous substances. Many states and municipalities followed suit in successive decades to regulate local pollution emissions and demand that private individuals and businesses safely dispose of a bevy of chemicals and discharges.

As the field of medicine has expanded to understand more about the dangers of biohazardous substances, they have fallen into the realm of EPA regulation.  These regulations apply to both disposal and transportation of these substances.  It is important to find a cleanup company that understands and follows these guidelines because with EPA, problems of compliance roll back up hill to the generator of the substances.  Accordingly, public agencies and private landowners have each become knowledgeable of the necessity to utilize the services of professional crime scene clean up companies to ensure they do not suffer such exposure to unnecessary legal and liability troubles.

Additionally, OSHA, has recognized the same issues of safety in work environments apply as that of disposal safety issues and EPA.  OSHA has the power to fine employers that fail to properly train and safeguard their employees when dealing with biohazardous substances.  Employeers, such as hotels and apartment complexes rarely have employees properly trained and equipped to handle death and accident scenes that involve blood or other bodily fluids.  Therefore it is imperative that they hire a crime scene company that does have the proper training and follows OSHA guidlines when cleaning biohazards on their properties.

Last, most companies that would need a cleanup tend to see things as a cost analysis issue.  Unfortunately for them and for the public, they forget to factor in the liability cost.  If they are caught disposing of biohazardous substances improperly or an employee or client becomes sick as a result of improper cleaning or disposal, the liability can be in the millions.  It is cheaper in the long run to just do it correctly and hire a professional company to handle any of the things falling under the heading of crime scene cleaning.

This information was originally published as part of the Crime Scene Cleanup blog at http://www.advancedbio-treatment.com/blog. For more insight into the world of crime scene cleanup, follow us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/crime.scene.cleaners.

Blood Scene Cleanup Needed After Deputy Shoots Fleeing Suspects

Sunday, February 27th, 2011

In the Atlanta suburb of Smyrna three Mexican undocumented aliens shared an apartment not far from Cobb Parkway, a major six-lane road running through the area. A warrant for the arrest of one of them for a fight he had gotten into the night before at a local taqueria was going to be served on him. But when the police deputy came to the apartment, the other two fled out the back patio. The deputy took chase of the two men demanding they stop. When they refused, he shot two shots hitting both men, one in the back of the leg and the other in his shoulder. The man hit in his leg sustained a breach of his femoral artery causing an enormous amount of blood to be lost.

The officer called in backup to secure the area at the apartment complex and also told the property manager to bring in a crime scene cleanup crew to remove the blood, tissue, other refuse and sanitize the area. The crime scene cleanup company which specialized in homicide scene clean ups, suicide scene clean ups, meth lab clean ups, odor removal clean ups and death scene clean ups, not to mention staph infection scene clean ups, certainly had the expertise to put the complex back in to the condition it was in prior to the shootings.

The next day, other than the reports on the local news channels, there was no evidence that the shootings had occurred thanks to the good work of the crime scene clean up company. The two Mexican men were in the hospital awaiting transport back to Mexico by the INS. The deputy had to deal with an internal investigation to see if his firing was justified (it was) and the person to whom the warrant was addressed, moved to a new address eluding the grasp of the police and the county’s criminal justice system.

This information was originally published as part of the Crime Scene Cleanup blog at http://www.advancedbio-treatment.com/blog.

For more information about our suicide scene remediation services, contact Advanced Bio-Treatment toll free at 800-860-4268.

Crime Scene Cleanup Technician Spots Crucial Evidence

Sunday, February 20th, 2011

The hard-luck man pulled in to the convenience store in Marietta. Short of funds to pay child support and put food on his table, he incorrectly surmised that this was the best course of action.  He was bright enough to know not to pull his vehicle up to any outside video cameras as he had cased the parking lot earlier. What he failed to do was to cover his head.  He went in to the store when no one was in there besides the clerk. He proceeded to the counter and pulled out his weapon. When the clerk attempted to move his hand to a position beneath the counter, the robber unloaded two shots blasting his shoulder and hitting some merchandise. He threatened the clerk demanding he open the safe and give him all of the money. The clerk complied giving him over $900, the amount accumulated since the last removal of cash in the morning.

The robber escaped to his vehicle and began to ride away as the injured clerk, losing blood, presses the button under his counter alerting the police. They come in minutes and order an ambulance to take the clerk for medical help. On the way a police detective interviews him and gets a description. He returns to the store and views the videotape. A crime scene clean up company, called in by the police began to clean the mess left by the robber. As they are cleaning up the area by the counter, they notice a small speck of blood missed by the police as it was so small. Apparently, he had scratched himself on a metal appendage attached to the counter when he drew his gun. One of the employees of the crime scene clean up company showed this to the police. As this crime scene clean up company frequently conducts suicide scene cleanups, meth lab cleanups, odor removal cleanups and other death scene cleanups as well as blood and trauma scene cleanups, they have experience working with police and identifying substances.

The police ran the blood for DNA analysis and compared it to samples they had in storage at the county jail. A previous defendant whose photograph matched the image in the convenient store’s video footage was identified. An address for the man was found at the courthouse and the perpetrator was arrested and convicted. In this instance, give a big shout out to the crime scene clean up company that helped the police solve the armed robbery.

This information was originally published as part of the Crime Scene Cleanup blog at http://www.advancedbio-treatment.com/blog.

For more information about our suicide scene remediation services, contact Advanced Bio-Treatment toll free at 800-860-4268.