Breaking Bad At Nist: No Doubt The "man Is Still The Largest Dope Dealer In The World"

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http://news.sciencemag.org/chemistry/2015/07/breaking-bad-nist

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The NIST Administration Building on the agency’s campus in Gaithersburg, Maryland.

Breaking bad at NIST

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Juan David Romero
22 July 2015 6:15 pm
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The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) appears to have been the unwitting victim of a real-life Walter White, the meth-cooking chemistry teacher in the hit television show Breaking Bad. A weekend explosion at the federal laboratory’s Gaithersburg, Maryland, campus was linked yesterday to the production of methamphetamine, an illegal stimulant often “cooked” in home laboratories. Federal and local law enforcement agencies are now investigating how the explosion happened and whether a NIST security guard injured in the blast might have been involved.

“Just as in any investigation … we’re interviewing possible witnesses and letting the evidence take us just where it should,” said Montgomery County Police Department spokesman Captain Paul Starks, who added that no charges have been filed and no suspects publicly identified.



On Saturday, 18 July, an explosion rocked the NIST campus around 6:45 p.m., injuring the security guard and sending the institute’s fire and police forces flocking to the scene, Starks said. The explosion happened at “special projects” building 236, a smaller facility with laboratories reserved for particularly hazardous research. According to NIST spokeswoman Gail Porter, the lab in question was not in use at the time of the incident, but was transitioning from combustion research to a new project.

The guard, who suffered non–life-threatening burns, resigned on 19 July, Porter said.

The Associated Press has reported that Epsom salts and other materials associated with meth production were found in the lab, whereas one local television news station quoted federal law enforcement sources saying that pseudoephedrine, drain opener, and a recipe for meth were also found. Citing the ongoing investigation—which is being carried out jointly by Montgomery County and the Drug Enforcement Agency—Starks said only that “some evidence” indicates that drugs such as methamphetamine were being manufactured. He would not confirm whether materials used for the creation of controlled substances were being stored on the property or brought onto the property.

Representative Lamar Smith (R–TX), chairman at the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee, got involved today, expressing grave concern over the incident in aletter to Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker. NIST is part of the Commerce Department.

“I am troubled by the allegations that such dangerous and illicit activity went undetected at a federal research facility. It is essential that we determine exactly where the breakdown in protocol occurred and whether similar activities could be ongoing at other federal facilities,” wrote Smith in an accompanying press release. He has requested a briefing with NIST no later than 29 July.


Posted in Chemistry, Policy
 
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Scorpius

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Hey, where better to cook meth than federal property where you are the only person around at night and the security guard, especially when you have a lot of scientific lab equipment just sitting around?!
Yes, the security guard who was injured was involved. It is likely he will never be convicted if he is smart.
If all your ingredients and equipment are already there, then there is no evidence you are bringing in, no trail of purchases and nothing sitting around at home to implicate you. Go to work. Make some meth. Go sell it. Go home with extra cash in pocket.
He was caught in the explosion, so he has methamphetamine and associated chemical residue on him. If he was smart, wore gloves and showered and washed his clothes on the premises, he would never get caught "red handed"
This begs the question, "Why isn't there a camera covering every square inch of a federal facility?". The answer is simple. The Government would need countless million cameras for that sort of coverage.
The installation of microphones pretty much everywhere in the former Soviet Union helped to bankrupt the regime (okay, it wasn't the same as the effect of trying to keep up with US nuke production). As a kid, visiting Russia just after the fall of the USSR, I looked inside my telephone handset in my hotel room and, lo and behold, there was a bug inside it! There was no one listening at the other end by that point, though.
It also begs the question, if a Federally employed security guard can exploit his position to run a meth factory, on the taxpayers dime, how many people out there are in a position to exploit a US Government job to pursue a terrorist agenda? That buzzword, meth, is exploited to distract you from the real question because it is quite embarrassing, when you think about it! Also, who knows if they were really making meth? They could just as easily have been making explosives.
 
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