266 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
266 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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ENVIRONMENTAL CRIMES: INVESTIGATIVE BASICS
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By
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Martin Wright
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Deputy Assistant Director
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Office of Criminal Investigations
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Environmental Protection Agency
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and
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William Imfeld
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Assistant Special Agent
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Albany, New York, FBI Field Office
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Chemical wastes have been dumped into America's environment
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for over 350 years, dating back to Pilgrim settlements in
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Massachusetts and the manufacture of saltpeter and alum. By the
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late 1930s, the chemical industry in the United States was
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producing over 170 million pounds of synthetic-organic chemicals
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annually. This figure skyrocketed to an estimated 2 trillion
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pounds annually by the late 1980s, a direct result of the
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"chemical revolution" that has transformed America since World
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War II. (1)
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While the chemical revolution benefits all of us by
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creating new products to enhance our living standards, it also
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has a significant downside. It has created over 80 million
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pounds of hazardous waste, and alarmingly, if early 1980s
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estimates of only 10 percent proper disposal are accurate,
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America faces an enormous silent enemy. (2)
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BRIEF HISTORY
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Pollution laws existed at both the State and Federal levels
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by 1899; however, more than 60 years passed before there were
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criminal sanctions for illegal disposal of hazardous wastes. In
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the late 1970s and early 1980s, the Resource Conservation and
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Recovery Act and "superfund" legislation finally allowed
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prosecutors to seek stiff criminal sanctions for the illegal
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disposal of hazardous wastes. As a result, tremendous progress
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has been made in the effort to enforce environmental laws.
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Approximately 614 indictments or informations have been filed,
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over $31 million in criminal fines have been imposed, and 474
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corporations or individuals have been convicted. In addition,
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these cases have set precedents in the field of environmental
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law.
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Because of the general public's heightened awareness and
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concern, environmental crimes are gaining the attention of law
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enforcement personnel, and many States already have established
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active environmental crime investigative units. However, in
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order to investigate these crimes successfully, it is necessary
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to develop an investigative plan.
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INVESTIGATIVE PLAN
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A typical environmental crime investigation may begin with
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a complaint from a former disgruntled employee, who says that a
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certain company, in order to avoid the high costs of legal
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disposal, buried over 300, 55-gallon drums of hazardous waste in
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the back part of the company's property. If the allegation is
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determined to be credible, several critical steps should be
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taken. Investigators should:
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* Identify which hazardous waste is involved
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* Identify who is responsible for the illegal waste
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disposal
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* Document the investigation in order to prove criminal
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intent
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Investigators can learn important information about the
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companies in question by checking a variety of sources.
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Investigators should familiarize themselves with these sources.
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SOURCES OF INFORMATION
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As soon as a case is opened, investigators should learn as
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much as possible about the suspect company. They should
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determine both what the company is authorized and not authorized
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to do. They should also determine what documentation the
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company is required to maintain so they will know what should be
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reviewed or inspected when investigators confront the company.
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And, it is important to anticipate what hazardous materials may
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be involved by reviewing documents on past operations and
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violations.
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Much of the information investigators need is available
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from State, local, and regulatory agencies. For example, States
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maintain lists of authorized hazardous waste generators and
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transporters, as well as treatment and storage/disposal
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facilities. Fire departments sometimes have information
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concerning on-site inspections or unusual occurrences at the
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company's facilities. Health departments may have complaints of
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contamination in nearby areas. In addition, licensing agencies
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have information about business operations, company officers and
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owners, and annual reports. And, reports filed with the
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Securities and Exchange Commission may reveal principal
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products, legal proceedings, financial data, directors/officers,
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and other significant information.
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Informants are another good source of information. They
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may be able to pinpoint specific details about illegal
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activities, such as when and where these activities occurred,
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and what efforts were made to conceal the illegal acts.
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Once investigators learn as much as possible about the
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suspect company, they should decide how the investigation should
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proceed, what investigative techniques should be used, and the
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legality of those techniques.
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THE INVESTIGATION
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There are several effective investigative techniques to use
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during hazardous waste investigations, including:
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* Stationary, moving, and aerial surveillance to document
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ongoing criminal activity
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* Long-range photography and closed-circuit television to
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document probable cause
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* Tracing the origins of drum and barrel markings to
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manufacturers and purchasers
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* Remote monitoring devices to gather evidence
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* Consensual monitoring of informants and cooperating
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witnesses to obtain first-hand incriminating statements
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* Grand juries, which may result in unexpected evidence
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through compelled cooperation
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Throughout the investigation, it is important for
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investigators to keep detailed notes on what they see, hear,
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taste, smell, and feel. Since exposure to hazardous materials
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causes physiological symptoms, investigators should let their
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senses help them in the investigation. It is also a good idea
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for investigators to take photographs to provide clear evidence
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of what they see.
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While gathering evidence to substantiate criminal
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violations, it is also important to note any precautions the
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company has taken to prevent waste from escaping, such as
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fences, settling ponds, warning signs, and monitoring devices.
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If the company uses these precautions as a defense during
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prosecution, investigators should be ready to explain why they
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did not work.
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SUPPORT TEAM
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Another important step in hazardous waste investigations is
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to assemble a technical team to assist in the investigation.
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This team of experts offers technical and legal advice to the
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case investigators.
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As the investigation progresses, it is important to build
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an investigative support team to ensure proper preparation and
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execution of a site sampling plan, proper evidence collection
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and chain of custody, and proper analyses, storage, and disposal
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of samples. For example, from the onset of the investigation,
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the prosecutor should be available not only to recognize and
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interpret legal nuances but also to evaluate the potential for
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prosecution. Also, as the need arises, investigators should add
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other specialists to the team, including:
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* Technical specialists, such as engineers, chemists, and
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geologists, who can give guidance on what to sample and
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how to sample properly
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* Equipment operators for digging equipment, barrel
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handling devices, remote sensing and sampling devices,
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and a variety of hand-operated equipment necessary for
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unearthing buried evidence
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* Health and safety specialists who can give advice
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regarding the dangers of possible exposure to hazardous
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substances and advice on what equipment and methods to
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use in order to maximize the protection of search
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personnel
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* Regulatory agency personnel to evaluate documentary and
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physical evidence to determine whether the continued
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operation of the company would jeopardize the public's
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health
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* Other investigative personnel to photograph the site,
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maintain the search logs, identify and interview persons
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present at the facility, prepare sketches and field
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notes, and prepare chain-of-custody forms and receipts
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In addition, there is a need for security and safety backup
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personnel. This should include police to assist in crowd
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control, fire department and emergency medical personnel in the
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event of an accident or possible explosion or fire during the
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search, and HAZMAT (hazardous material) personnel to assist in
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decontamination and confinement, if there is some exposure to
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hazardous substances.
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During the preliminary investigation, investigators should
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attempt to answer as many questions as possible without
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intruding on the company's property. However, in order to
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obtain answers to all of the questions, company officials must
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be confronted, and this action may require a search warrant.
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SEARCH WARRANTS
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Search warrants allow investigators to go onto private
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property to investigate further illegal hazardous waste activity
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and to obtain samples of hazardous waste. However, before a
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search warrant can be issued, probable cause that a crime has
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been committed and that evidence exists in the place to be
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searched must be shown. Investigators should document their
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case through information they have developed during the
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investigation, as well as other supporting exhibits, such as
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maps, photographs, manifests, citizen complaints, and off-site
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monitoring results.
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Of paramount importance when a search is conducted is
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recognizing that the persons executing the warrant may be
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exposed to hazardous substances. Therefore, no warrant should
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be executed until there is a health and safety plan that is
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understood by all search participants. Also, no samples of
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hazardous or potentially hazardous substances should be taken by
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other than properly trained and environmentally protected
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personnel.
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Prior to serving the warrant, each person on the
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investigative team should read the search warrant and affidavit.
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It is important that they understand what is within the scope of
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the warrant, such as items to search and seize and places to
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search. The team should be able to locate and secure the
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necessary evidence in an efficient and effective manner that is
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safe to both investigative personnel and the surrounding
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community.
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CONCLUSION
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The disposal of hazardous wastes in America is not a new
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problem. What is relatively new, however, is the public's
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heightened awareness of this environmental problem. In the last
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decade, well-planned, aggressive team approaches to
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environmental law enforcement have been the key to successful
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prosecutions for the illegal disposal of hazardous waste.
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Through experience and proper training, law enforcement officers
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can detect and investigate environmental crimes successfully.
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This, in turn, may ultimately serve as a deterrent to those who
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attempt to shortcut the system at the expense of the public's
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health.
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FOOTNOTES
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(1) Christopher Harris, William L. Want, and Morris Ward,
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Hazardous Waste, Confronting the Challenge (Westport,
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Connecticut: Quorum Books, 1987), p. 5.
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(2) Samuel Epstein, Lester O. Brown, and Carl Pope,
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Hazardous Waste in America, (San Francisco: 1982), p. 7.
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