Pubdate: Tue, 14 May 2002 Source: Knoxville News-Sentinel (TN) Copyright: 2002 The Knoxville News-Sentinel Co. Contact: http://www.knoxnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/226 Author: J.J. Stambaugh, News-Sentinel staff writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) TWO MEN DIE AFTER METH LAB BLAST Survivor Calls 911 Three Days After Explosion BULLS GAP, Tenn. -- At least two men died over the weekend, and a third was critically injured after a makeshift methamphetamine lab exploded in a mobile home, authorities said Monday. Apparently the explosion happened Friday evening but wasn't reported until 10 a.m. Monday when the only surviving victim called E-911 because he was having problems breathing, according to police accounts. One body was recovered from the trailer, and police were searching the area for the body of a second man who was reportedly killed in the explosion and later buried by one of his accomplices. "One guy dies in the explosion, and one guy disposes of the body," explained Hawkins County Sheriff Wayne Clevinger. "He then comes back to the mobile home, but he's really coming back to his own tomb due to the toxic chemicals." After their accomplice was buried, the two men apparently spent the rest of the weekend in the chemical-drenched mobile home, and "sometime between Friday night and Monday morning" one of them died, while the other grew deathly ill, Clevinger said. None of the men had been positively identified as of Monday evening. The surviving victim was flown to Holston Valley Hospital in Kingsport, where he was listed in critical condition. Clevinger said he was unsure as to the extent of the man's injuries but added that he had apparently suffered severe burns to the inside of his throat, lungs and esophagus. Authorities theorized that the men didn't call for help because of the illegal nature of their enterprise. "I don't know what gets into peoples' minds," the sheriff said. Attempts to piece together exactly what happened over the weekend were hampered because of concerns over the chemicals that were released in the explosion, officials said. "We don't know what's in there and we won't know until we actually go into the premises," said Hawkins County Emergency Management Director Tony Armstrong. "No one is allowed in there right now." Nine sheriff's deputies and emergency workers had to undergo decontamination procedures after pulling the sole survivor from the trailer, Armstrong said, including four deputies who were later examined at an area hospital. After the initial criminal investigation is complete, the site will be decontaminated by workers hired from a hazardous material cleanup company in the Tri-Cities area, officials said. "That takes a lot of money," said Clevinger. Officials said they didn't believe the chemicals posed a danger to the neighborhood, which consists mainly of farms and secluded homesteads tucked off Lawson Road. According to police accounts, an ambulance was dispatched to the trailer at 328 Lawson Road about 10:02 a.m. after a male subject called E-911 to complain of breathing problems, Clevinger said. When the ambulance crew arrived a little more than 20 minutes later, they called for assistance from the sheriff's department. One man's corpse was found in the bathroom, the apparent victim of a combination of burns and prolonged exposure to toxic fumes. The surviving victim told them that a second body was buried somewhere nearby and accused the man who was found dead in the bathroom of disposing of the corpse after Friday's blast. The man's injuries were too severe, however, for him to provide a more detailed account of the incident or to identify his accomplices, the sheriff explained. Neighbors didn't report hearing an explosion, and most of them were unaware that a methamphetamine lab had blown up until they learned of the incident from media reports. "We didn't know," said Vivian Everhart, who lives within 100 yards of the trailer's driveway. "We thought maybe someone had been shot." Everhart described the men who lived in the trailer as "quiet boys" but went on to say that they had a lot of visitors, which was unusual in such a rural area. "All we know is there was a lot of traffic, but they never bothered us with noise," she said. "I didn't even know their names." According to Clevinger, Hawkins County is no different than many other communities in northeastern Tennessee that have been swamped with clandestine methamphetamine labs. "We're just like everybody else," he said. "They've just seemed to be popping up here and there over the past year or two." The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration are assisting in the cleanup and investigation, Clevinger said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl