"How Crime Scene Cleanup Works" grew from the author's other writings on this worthy subject. As writing goes, It may not cause our gentle readers to clap their hands and jump about like some of those other "How Crime Scene Cleanup Works" articles, but at least it informs with facts.

How Crime Scene Cleanup Works reflects the author's numerous attempts to dispel myths related to cleaning and bloodborne pathogens. Explaining how crime scene cleanup works ought to have a professional cleaner do this important writing. This body belongs to Eddie Evans.

 

Inevitable Corruption Crime Scene Cleanup Works

The author concerns himself with only facts related to how crime scene cleanup really works. First he leads readers through a brief history. How did this type of biohazard clenup become a great big, multi-millioni dollar cleaning industry? more

 

 

How Crime Scene Cleanup Works continued

Inevitable corruption shown in article, "How Crime Scene Cleanup Works" - - Continued

Our author shows how local county corruption works in his home county, Orange County, California. Using hypothetical and deductive arguments, our author shows Orange County's residents do not use Internet resources. (Readers immediately deduce our author's error in reasoning. He errors in this one finding. We all know that Orange County's citizens do use Internet resources, just not for death cleanup services.)

He then moves on to some gritty nuts-and-bolts of how crime scene cleanup works.

Use these Assumptions

 

"How Crime Scene Cleanup Works" articles tell how wonderful owners share their rerwards with employees.

Here's a qualification. The world of death cleanup looks like a rose bed for many city and county employees, but not those cleaning companies in the open, wild and wonderful free enterprise market.

What do they have that you don't have? They have a key to success, like they were hired into it. I suspect many of these pukes have family members in their various coroner and medical examiner offices too. Also, let's not forget the county administrators. They have contact with those in need of death cleanup help, and you don't.

So unless you belong to that inner-circle of local government employees with crony contacts, you are SOL, sure-out-of-luck.

 

 

 

 

A brief history: How Crime Scene Cleanup Works

  • Jobs

    How Crime Scene Cleanup Works flashing image

  • It's not a job creating industry
  • Few jobs exist for this field.
  • Crime scene cleanup technicians do not make $100 per hour. Try $20 if you're lucky, on-call, part-time, 365/24/7.
  • Starting your own Company
  • Starting your own crime scene cleanup company means you compete with civil servants like first responders, police, fire fighters and coroner, medical examiner technicians, plus county administrator assistants. If you have one of these jobs now, then you will succeed.
  • How could you not succeed? You have a guarantee to the death cleanup jobs. Any biohazard cleanup coming your way gets your business. You practically charge what you want. What you charge amounts to dozens of times what a guy like me gets to charge.
  • The difference between a crony company and a free market company comes to this. Crony companies have a monopoly. A monopoly means that no one else, or very few others, share in your monopoly market.
  • A free enterprise market means companies compete against one another. The try to charge the least because they must have the lowest prices. Without the lowest prices a free enterprise company does not receive work.
  • A free enterprises company must provide good or better service than monopoly companies. Without the best service a free enterprise company stands at risk. Bad service means a bad name, which no honest companies cares to have follow them.

I know these ideas because I experience them first-hand through my Orange County death cleanup web sites. In Orange County I own hundreds of web pages for blood cleanup, suicide cleanup, unattended death cleanup, and more. A person with an interest in Internet marketing might guess that so many web sites in an Orange County Internet network would create many telephone calls. It does not happen that way. What happens is just what I mentioned above, coroner's employees have their own companies and/or the send families of the dead to their own companies or crony companies.

There's not much more to it, other than congress created the conditions for this sort of fraud. Congress voted in the bloodborne pathogen act to protect US labor from deadly bloodborne pathogen diseases like HIV, hepatitis B, and hepatitis C. As a result congress accidentally created a very profitable business for those interested in cleaning up blood from violent deaths and decomposition following unattended deaths.

 

Problems for Blood Cleanup

  • Rarely do we hear about blood cleanup's problem causing situations. Can you imagine removing blood from a flour churning machine used for tortia production? Imagine a worker falling into a churning vat after suffering a gunshot to his head. Lifeless, his body churns into a disarticulated state. Upon arrival the cleaning technician must remove more than blood and fluids Hair, bone, skin, clothing, pieces of shoes and more cause real concerns.
  • Most important, in a production plant intent on using their machine on the very next shift. Their machine's cleanliness must pass rigorous health-and-safety inspections.
  • Blood remains wet or moist during cleaning. As such it has potentially living bloodborne pathogens. Caution, skill, patience, and safety first dictate cleaning methods.
  • Not all biohazard cleanup work follows a death or trauma incident quickly. Some times a decedent remains in place for days, weeks, and longer. During this time their body decomposes, denatures. It's fluids leak and migrate around and beyond, contaminating everthing in its path. If above a first floor there's a possibility of blood and fluids leaking below the floor, onto the ceiling below, and farther still. All this fluid presents serious odor issues, even when dried by weeks of decomposition.
  • Removing blood and other fluids becomes a real choir under decomposition conditions. In its own way blood acts like a tissue. Anyone with experience removing great quantities of dried blood from flat, grainy surfaces will testify to blood's adhesion power. Other body fluids coming close to blood's adhesive qualities we find in cerebral fluid, a milky-white substance contained in the cerebral cortex of our skulls, the uppermost area above our hair lines. This area represents the small, human side of our human being. Cerebral fluid's power to adhere in open air will not be disputed by experienced technicians.
  • Blood's adhesive powers resemble those of cerebral fluid so closely that many lab technicians believe blood and cerebral fluid share a chemical property known to cause a "cascade" affect in open air. For blood, these cascades become scab-like clusters. For cerebral fluid these cascades cause adhesion.
  • Rinsing blood from a surface will not remove all blood from the rinsed surface. Scrubbing begins to loosen, dilute, and remove blood. Chemical treatment of loosens, decontaminates, and helps remove blood from soiled areas. Blood's presence continues untilt other chemicals and lights used by technicians prove soiled areas "clean."

During decomposition, enzymes in blood shape blood's adhesive qualities as it dries. This adhesion occurs by intramolecular attractions. If we think of tiny magnets within the tiny enzymes, each pulling to those surrounding it, we get an idea of what goes on as blood decomposes.

  • Once cleaned, an area might need sealing because of damage from vigorous scrubbing.