If found in a car, shed, residence, or any other location, patrol officers should stay upwind and be careful not to touch these items if they appear contaminated.
Warning: Never attempt to handle or disassemble any lab components without the proper training, safety gear, and a decontamination station set up. Call in your narcotic officers and hazmat team.
• Cold or allergy medication containing ephedrine or pseudoephedrine.
• Alcohol base solvents such as the auto gas additive Heat, acetone, or denatured alcohol.
• Unlabeled bottles or jars containing a clear liquid over white sediment.
• Coffee filters containing chunky sediment (usually the same color as the cold medication pills used).
• Glass pots and pans containing a white residue.
• Heat-resistive glassware such as coffee pots, flasks, and beakers containing red or amber contamination.
• Unlabeled bottles or jars containing bi-phase liquids, usually clear or tinted green over amber. These liquids are often acidic, corrosive, or flammable.
• Acidic or corrosive chemicals stored in unmarked bottles or jars.
• Contaminated plastic tubing, buckets, spatulas, wooden spoons, etc., stained amber or red.
• Hot plates with amber or red contamination on them.
• Twisted coffee filters or sheets stained amber and containing chunky red phosphorus.
• Plastic jars labeled red phosphorus.
• Glass jars labeled iodine crystals.
• Plastic jar containing granular lye.
• Organic solvents such as Coleman fuel, naphtha, freon, white gas, butane, paint thinner, methyl ethyl ketone, lighter fluid, etc.
• A plastic soda bottle with a tube secured to the top and containing a yellow liquid over gray sludge.
• Contaminated funnels and coffee filters.
• Plastic jug containing muriatic acid (hydrochloric acid).
• Plastic jug containing Drano (sulfuric acid).
• Rock salt.
• Aluminum foil.
• Amber-stained scales, plastic baggies, pay-owe sheets, spoons, scrapers, etc.
• Filters containing amber or white methamphetamine.
• Amber or red contaminated gloves, clothing, shoes, breathing masks, etc.
Dave Street is a senior detective and 28-year veteran with the Riverside County (Calif.) Sheriff’s Department. He worked major narcotics for seven years and currently works as a “crimes against persons” detective out of the RSO Moreno Valley station.