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The FBI is searching a southern California aerospace facility after a chemical incident forced 50,000 residents to evacuate. A search warrant was issued for records related to the storage and use of methyl methacrylate, a highly flammable chemical.
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The FBI is searching a southern California aerospace facility where an overheated chemical tank forced 50,000 residents to evacuate last month, after federal authorities served a search warrant there on Wednesday.
Signed by a federal judge last week, the warrant approved the seizure of records related to the “storage, use or disposal” of methyl methacrylate, the chemical stored inside the tank that authorities feared could explode.
The Orange county district attorney’s office is conducting a separate criminal investigation into the aerospace plant, and has ordered the company “not to modify or destroy any evidence”, spokesperson Kimberly Edds told the Associated Press.
Located in the Orange county city of Garden Grove, the aerospace facility GKN Aerospace Transparency Systems is a UK-based company focused on manufacturing cockpit windows, canopies and windshields.
The tank that overheated in late May contained 6,000 to 7,000 gallons of methyl methacrylate, which is highly flammable. The liquid is used in the manufacturing of plastics and coatings, such as Plexiglas and dental prosthetics.
Exposure to the chemical can cause serious respiratory problems, neurological issues and irritation to the skin, eyes and throat, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.
“Samples of the substance within any tank, tote, drum, vat, vessel, or container suspected of containing or having previously contained methyl methacrylate and/or any hazardous substance” were also sought, according to the federal warrant.
The warrant also orders agents to seize records related to “any cooling equipment or other equipment used to control or regulate the temperature of methyl methacrylate”.
“We are cooperating with authorities at our Garden Grove facility and will continue to do so,” a GKN spokesperson told the AP on Wednesday morning.
Speaking at a community meeting on Tuesday, GKN senior vice-president Steve Carlin thanked the firefighters and local leaders who responded to the May incident, and apologized to the Garden Grove community.
“On behalf of GKN and the Garden Grove plant, I want to say that I’m sorry that this event and this incident occurred. I understand and I realized sitting here tonight what a disruptive event it was and how unsettling it is to the greater community. Particularly unsettling to us at GKN because of the long history that we have with Garden Grove and how connected we are to this community,” he said.
At the meeting, city leaders and residents asked GKN to consider relocating the tanks of methyl methacrylate, but Carlin said it is too early in the investigation for the company to make such a determination.
The evacuation was caused by an overheated chemical tank at an aerospace facility that stored methyl methacrylate.
Methyl methacrylate is a highly flammable chemical used in manufacturing plastics and coatings, and it posed an explosion risk when overheated.
The Orange County district attorney's office is conducting a criminal investigation and has ordered the aerospace company not to modify or destroy any evidence.
The GKN Aerospace Transparency Systems facility is located in Garden Grove, California.
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Reports of the overheating tank emerged on 21 May and residents of Garden Grove were evacuated the following day. Most evacuees were able to return home over the Memorial Day weekend after a crack in the tank formed, relieving pressure and avoiding an explosion. About a dozen evacuated people and businesses have filed lawsuits against GKN since the incident occurred and some locals reported strong odors, respiratory irritation, headaches and dizziness.
Orange county health officials said no contamination or fumes were released, and that they would monitor the air for several months and check the sewer and storm drains.
The California incident was the first of two major hazardous chemical emergencies on the west coast within a week of each other. Five days after the GKN incident began, a large tank containing a corrosive chemical at a Longview, Washington, paper mill ruptured and imploded, killing 11 people.
The Associated Press contributed reporting