Pubdate: Thu, 11 Oct 2007 Source: Chronicle-Journal, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 The Chronicle-Journal Contact: http://tricubemedia.net/tbayemail/letters.php Website: http://www.chroniclejournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3155 Author: Julio Gomes HOUSE COMES OUT CLEAN A full-scale search of a south-side Thunder Bay home by police and hazardous materials specialists has turned up nothing that appears to make it an illegal drug lab. But the investigation is continuing and police aren't ready to say the Prince Arthur Boulevard home isn't a hazard. "The actual final conclusion won't be known for some time," Thunder Bay Police spokesman Chris Adams said Thursday. "It's probably safe to say the danger level has dropped quite a bit." The incident began just before 1 p.m. Tuesday when Dennis Kotyk returned to his family home after an appointment. According to reports, he encountered an intruder on the stairway, who proceeded to strike him with a pipe or piece of metal before fleeing. An injured Kotyk, 65, staggered to a neighbour's house and called for help. While he was taken to hospital, officers began a search of his two-storey house. In the basement, an officer came across bottles of lye and hydrochloric acid, which led to the suspicion the house could be a meth lab. Gene Kotyk said it was only later that he was informed these are ingredients used to make speed, an ampethamine. His brother, he said, was using the chemicals for a more benign purpose: specialty soap. A friend who has helped Kotyk could only laugh when it was suggested he was suspected of using the chemicals to manufacture street drugs. "Let's put it this way: I make soap and you can't make soap without lye," he said when contacted by The Chronicle-Journal. "It's a total misunderstanding, and poor Dennis got a beating, too." Gene Kotyk said his younger brother was released from hospital Thursday afternoon, but he may need followup surgery. He suffered fractures of his cheekbones, a gash on his upper lip, a bruised forehead and concussion. "His eyes look like hockey pucks right now," Gene Kotyk said in a lighthearted moment. "He's pretty woozy and in quite a bit of pain." Gene Kotyk said when he went to his brother's house he was turned back by police. The block of Prince Arthur Boulevard between Ogden and Finlayson Streets was closed to traffic much of Thursday. Along with police cruisers, there were several fire trucks and a hazardous materials van, as well as a large van marked as the OPP's Clandestine Laboratory Investigative Response Team. The Emergency Measures Organization's mobile command unit was also in use. A few doors from Kotyk's house is St. Jude School. A Catholic school board official said there was "a modified lockdown" to keep the kids indoors and away from investigators. A mother waiting for her 10-year-old son was concerned, saying she didn't know what was happening. However, she was pleased to see such a variety of agencies called out to a potential emergency. "They're doing their jobs and being cautious. That's good," Debbie McFarlane said. After the teams - including men wearing protective suits - wrapped up their work, Adams reiterated that it had been the most sensible option to secure the property and conduct a detailed search for chemicals and drug-making equipment. "(Based on) the sum of the information available at the time, it was still the right determination," he said. "The provincial team that was up concurred it was the right thing to do to treat it as such." Adams said chemicals have been taken for testing, and officials with the fire department and city bylaw enforcement office were at the house. Gene Kotyk was expecting to go to there Thursday to fix a broken door. But while he was astounded by the turn of events, he wasn't ready to criticize the police and call the search excessive or an overreaction. "It seems they were more concerned about the drug aspect rather than Dennis's well-being," he said. "On the other hand, I talked to a fair number of (police officers) and I can understand their approach. They have to err on the side of caution." As for a suspect in the assault, police have not made any arrests. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek