in plain sight,
I guess is a good way to start this story, problem, how do
you hide a meth lab? answer, build it in one of the buildings operated by
the National Institute of Standards and Technology outside Washington,
D.C. the explosion occurred in NIST Building 236 on July 16th. and thankfully far from
the majority of the labs, so it did not damage any research endeavours, it
happened in a room that had been emptied of equipment, as one experiment had
recently ended and another was scheduled to begin, the blast occurred on a
Saturday, so luckily few employees were around, but it did injure a security
guard who was on duty,
so the question on everyone’s mind is: how was there a meth
lab in a government building, and who was operating it? Paul Starks, a
spokesman for the local Montgomery County police, would not comment on whether
any chemicals or equipment used to make the drugs were found on the property, but NBC Washington reports that the security guard was
found with burns on his arms and hands, igniting suspicion that he might have
been involved in making the meth, but Congress is worried, 'the fact that this
explosion took place at a taxpayer-funded NIST facility, potentially endangering
NIST employees, is of great concern,' says Lamar S. Smith, a congressman from
Texas and chairman of the Science, Space & Technology Committee in the U.S.
House of Representatives, he told Chemical and Engineering News, 'I am troubled by the
allegations that such dangerous and illicit activity went undetected at a
federal research facility,' the local Montgomery County Police Department is investigating
the incident, along with the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, so far
there have been no arrests and the investigation is ongoing and it begs the
question, how many other facilities have operations hidden in plain sight?
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