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Related: About this forumTo get rid of 'drug-addicted' rats, Houston police clean up evidence room
Although crowded evidence lockers are a problem police departments nationwide struggle with, legal experts warn that the urge to throw out old evidence should be tempered, because one never knows what could be useful for future investigations and as forensic technology advances. But allowing seized narcotics to pile up can also threaten the troves of more valuable evidence by attracting pests, said Peter Stout, who leads the Houston Forensic Science Center.
Theyre edible, theyre tasty, theyre all kinds of things. You cant store large quantities of drugs without expecting some of these things to happen, Stout said at the news conference, adding that the Houston police also have hired exterminators. But this is difficult getting these rodents out of there.
Theyre drug-addicted rats. Theyre tough to deal with.
Burning old drugs could incur costs in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, because it must be done in accordance with environmental guidelines, said Houstons police chief, J. Noe Diaz. The district attorneys office said it had completed its first burn of 15,000 pounds of narcotics on Thursday.
It costs a lot of money to destroy illicit narcotics, and so the DAs office is going to utilize funds that we control to help the city with this immediate problem, Harris County District Attorney Sean Teare said.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2025/01/21/get-rid-drug-addicted-rats-houston-police-clean-up-evidence-room/
https://wapo.st/4h4RQ4D

Think. Again.
(22,330 posts)enid602
(9,250 posts)Im surprised that the rats could beat the roaches to the drugs in Houston. When you enter a room there, you cover your eyes before turning the lights on, to give the roaches a chance to scatter,
LeftInTX
(32,761 posts)I also don't think they can "get high". (Depends on the drug)
I had rat bait boxes outside. I asked the exterminator if the bait would also kill roaches. He told me it would. Well, it turns out that not only was the bait attracting roaches, it doesn't harm them at all and increases their habitat. It was "free food" for them in the nice dark box. When I finally moved the boxes, hordes of roaches came out!
We use to provide roaches with little treats made of balls of baking powder and honey. Makes their stomachs explode.
Ray Bruns
(5,091 posts)We must do something to prevent the continuing spread of illegal drugs to our animal population!