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ZAK BROWN, Camera Staff Writer
Daily Camera (Boulder, Colorado)

Emergency crews were investigating a situation involving possibly hazardous chemicals and an apparent suicide at a Boulder hotel Thursday.

Boulder police responded to the Outlook Hotel and Suites at about 5 p.m. after the mother of a 41-year-old man called police and said her son may have committed suicide in a room at the hotel. There was no response when police went to the man's room, and after breaking down the door, they found him dead on the bathroom floor as a result of an apparent suicide, according to police spokeswoman Sarah Huntley.

Emergency workers in hazardous materials gear prepare to enter the room where chemicals were reported to have been found at the Boulder Outlook Hotel on Thursday evening. Photo by Paul Aiken / The Camera

Emergency workers in hazardous materials gear work outside the Boulder Outlook Hotel on Thursday evening. Photo by Paul Aiken / The Camera

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Officers also noticed an odor when they entered the room. After finding the man dead, they saw a note on the bathroom door that read, "Dangerous chemicals. Call firefighters." The officers quickly left the room and called a hazardous-materials team to investigate.

It appeared late Thursday that any chemicals that may have been released "were not lasting," Huntley said. She also said police were still investigating some belongings left in the room.

Police likely weren't going to know the type or amount of chemicals released until today, she said.

People staying in the north wing of the hotel, where the room is, were evacuated and relocated to other rooms. No symptoms were reported by anyone at the hotel or the officers, Huntley said, and first responders were being decontaminated as a precaution.

Several fire engines, police, ambulances and haz-mat crews were at the high-profile location just off U.S. 36.

Camera Staff Writer Brandon Schatsiek contributed to this report.

Copyright 2009 Daily Camera and Boulder Publishing, LLC
All Rights Reserved
June 12, 2009

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Received in an email from a couple of my stations:

Many of you may be familiar with the string of suicides we had last year involving helium gas made popular by the book "Final Exit" by Derek Humphry. A new method of suicide with chemicals readily available to consumers is out there and I have no doubt we may see this. Please take the time to read & be careful.


Recently a new way to commit suicide has been discovered by mixing two chemicals that can be bought over the counter at local stores. They are Bonide – a sulfur spray used as an insecticide for fruit trees and hydrochloric (muriatic) acid. Once mixed, the chemicals produce heat and a flammable, noxious gas that causes the subject to pass out and the heart stop within minutes. The process appears to be quick and painless. Two recent cases, one in Pasadena, California and the other at Lake Allatoona in Bartow County, Georgia, involved young men in their early 20's. Both were found locked inside their cars with the chemicals. Each left a note on the car warning anyone around of danger. The car at Lake Allatoona had been taped to prevent gas from escaping.

Does this sound like a routine call that most of us would respond to and take similar action?

It's Sunday morning 0730 hours, you respond to a person down in auto. You locate a car in the empty parking lot of a business. The engine and med unit pull up near the vehicle and personnel see a person inside that appears to be asleep or unconscious. Wearing safety glasses and medical gloves, you walk up to the car and knock on the window.

The patient does not respond to your knock on the window, and the doors are locked.
What action will you take? Will you hurry to make patient access? Will you use a lockout tool, center punch, or halligan to make entry?

You make access, a rush of warm air comes out of the vehicle and you smell a sharp odor. You have just become a victim and have been exposed to a noxious possibly fatal gas.

What could you have done differently? You are the first-in unit. How should you respond to this type of incident?

1. Do not become complacent! Your response should be similar on every call.
2. Be well trained, know your job, do your job.
3. Start your size-up from the time a call is dispatched.
4. Establish a strong command and control the scene.
5. Don't go rushing in.
6. Survey the scene.
7. Does the scene look routine?
8. Do you see anything unusual? (Example: A note on the window, containers
inside the vehicle and taped windows or vents).
9. Is the scene safe?
10. Wear the appropriate PPE.
11. Establish a Hot Zone.
12. Develop a plan of action and coordinate activities.
13. Call for additional resources. (Hazmat Team, PD, etc.)
14. Did PD arrive prior to FD and become contaminated requiring emergency decon and first aid?

The call listed in the first paragraph of this document started as a routine person down call. This type of incident can easily expand into a full blown Hazardous Materials Incident with a multijurisdictional response. Be aware of this new way to commit suicide and don't become a victim. Use common sense and stay safe.

To review a newspaper article and pictures regarding the suicide in Pasadena, California, visit:
http://beaconmedian ews.com/2008/ 08/26/23- year-old- man-commits- suicide-with- chemicals- inside-2003- vw-bug/


To review a newspaper article and pictures regarding the suicide in Barton, Georgia visit:
http://www.daily- tribune.com/ index.cfm? event=news. view&id=674BB0CD- 19B9-E2E2- 676EC6D537211BFE

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