Anonymous ID: fa056e Dec. 4, 2019, 7:33 p.m. No.7430268   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0286 >>0292 >>0295 >>0308 >>0312 >>0316 >>0356 >>0404

>>7427742 (PB)

 

I asked myself - "Self,

WHY do I keep seeing The Standard Hotel in qresearch?

WHY did Q have us dig about the choppa crash involving the Standard?

WHY did the Anon at >>7427742 (PB) just post this reminder about the Standard Hotel's problems with pool chemicals.

"

 

(I'll save you the trip - this is basically what it said)

 

Operator of Standard Hotel in Los Angeles Charged in Dumping of Chemicals that Caused Illnesses in Subway

https://archives.fbi.gov/archives/losangeles/press-releases/2009/la012909ausa.htm

 

Then I said to myself - "Self, LETS dig on this motherfucker a little." and 2 hours later, I have a [crazy] theory…

 

"WHAT IF they were dissolving bodies in those acid drums and pouring them down the drain?"

 

Yeah. Like in "Breaking Bad".

 

 

LA TIMES

 

Operators of the Standard Hotel in downtown Los Angeles agreed Tuesday to plead guilty to a charge of negligent discharge of pollutants and pay more than $370,000 after a hotel employee dumped POOL CHEMICALS down a rooftop drain last year, causing several people to become ill, the U.S. attorney’s office announced.

 

On Jan. 18, 2009, a maintenance worker poured chlorine and muriatic acid into a storm drain atop the trendy hotel, located at 550 S. Flower Street.

 

Authorities at first were concerned about A POSSIBLE TERRORIST ATTACK, but then traced the gas to a drain outside the Standard and DISCOVERED TWO EMPTY 50-GALLON DRUMS OF CHEMICALS NEAR THE HOTEL’S ROOFTOP POOL.

 

FBI agents said employees eventually acknowledged emptying the majority of the contents of both drums down the drain.

 

https://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2010/03/standard-hotel-pleads-guilty-to-dumping-pool-chemicals-down-rooftop-drain.html

 

 

LA TIMES

 

Hotel maintenance workers initially admitted pouring a small amount of chlorine down a rooftop drain. But investigators did not believe that would have accounted for the noxious cloud. An FBI agent, who SPECIALIZES IN ENVIRONMENTAL CRIMES and who IS KNOWN FOR HER PIT BULL-LIKE TENACITY, conducted follow-up interviews in which EMPLOYEES EVENTUALLY ACKNOWLEDGED EMPTYING THE MAJORITY OF TWO 50-GALLON DRUMS OF MURIATIC ACID AND CHLORINE into the drain, the complaint alleges.

 

 

Mark Rowley, the hotel’s chief engineer, allegedly told O’Donnelly HE KNEW the “best way” to get rid of the chemicals would have been to hire a disposal company to truck them away, according to court records.

 

But he decided “we could DEAL WITH IT this way,” the court documents state.

 

https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2009-jan-31-me-standard31-story.html

 

 

MURIATIC ACID (HCL) CAN BE USED TO DISSOLVE MEAT AND BONE

 

Wanna see? Watch this video -https://www.chemistryworld.com/opinion/can-acid-dissolve-a-body/3007496.article

 

Needed to dump two 55 gallon drums of muriatic acid for a small roof pool?

 

How many gallons is the Standard Hotel's roof swimming pool. Do hotels normally need 110 gallons of Muriatic acid.

 

[[[TO BE CONTINUED…]]]

Anonymous ID: fa056e Dec. 4, 2019, 7:34 p.m. No.7430286   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0312 >>0358

>>7430268

 

[[[…CONTINUED]]]

 

WHAT DO YOU NORMALLY DO WITH MURIATIC ACID AND A POOL

 

"Hydrochloric (Muriatic) Acid 20-degree BE in liquid form typically used to LOWER pH or total alkalinity levels. This commercial-grade product is available in both 15 and 55-gallon drums."

 

One 55 gallon drum of Muriatic [Hydrochloric] Acid costs about $240 USD.

https://leisurepoolinc.com/shop/pool-spa-chemicals/balancers/ph-balancers/hydrochloric-acid-20be-ph-decreaser-drums/

 

HOW BIG IS THE POOL AT THE STANDARD HOTEL

 

Judging by Google Earth measurements of the pool, it's 60 feet long, 14 feet wide. Using an online pool calculator, (estimating 3' depth shallow end and 6' depth deep end), the volume of that pool is in the neighborhood of 28,000 to 30,000 gallons of water.

 

HOW MUCH MURATIC ACID MIGHT YOU NEED TO CONTROL pH LEVELS IN A COMMERCIAL POOL THAT SIZE

 

Using the chart (attached) let's assume that the pool is 50,000 gallons (there is no 30,000 on the chart), and the pH is WAY off - let's say "Over 8.4"… so to treat the whole pool you would need 1.25 gallons of Muriatic acid. So, then, how OFTEN does Standard Hotel need to treat it's pool for excessively HIGH pH. I'll call a few commercial pool operators tomorrow, but for now I'll use my own experience. I generally treat pH once or twice a year. (20,000 gal in-ground pool, moderate use). Commercial pools need to use more chemicals, but do they need to keep (2) 55 gal. drums of it nearby?

 

 

HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE TO DISSOLVE A HUMAN BODY?

 

Nowadays, most bodies are liquefied for legitimate reasons. Some universities use industrial digesters to dispose of cadavers used for research and medical education. The machine, which looks like an enormous pressure cooker, mixes about 70 gallons of water with a small amount of lye. When the five- to eight-hour cycle is complete—that’s three hours to destroy the body, plus a few more to heat and cool the solution—the liquefied remains are safe to pour down the drain. A perforated basket catches the solids that survive the process, including implanted medical devices and “bone shadows”—calcium phosphate that makes up about 70 percent of the mass of bones and teeth. The bony bits can be crushed into a fine white powder.

 

Acids can dissolve a body more completely than lye—liquefying even the bones and teeth—but it takes longer and can be hazardous.

 

 

GOD I HOPE I'M WRONG!

 

And with that, I'm OUT. Sure that I'm being added to ANOTHER watch list. Wish I could get a list of lists I'm on…