Enter query terms separated by spaces.

Search for:
Display results by:
Search from:
 
through:
 

Exploding Vending Machine Creates Chemical Agent From Friday, June 25, 2004 issue.

Exploding Vending Machine Creates Chemical Agent


An explosion and small fire inside a vending machine in a Texas hospital transformed the appliance’s freon coolant into phosgene, Reuters reported today (see GSN, June 22).

Used as a choking agent, phosgene was responsible for most of the chemical warfare deaths during World War I (Centers for Disease Control, Facts About Phosgene).

A food service employee was working on the soda machine in the Park Place Medical Center in Port Arthur, Texas, when the explosion occurred, according to local Fire Marshal Mark Mulliner.

“When freon gas from the cooling system came into contact with the heat from the fire, it changed composition to a phosgene gas,” Mulliner said.

“We were fortunate one of our officers who was first on the scene had some familiarity with phosgene and quickly evacuated the area,” said Mulliner, who added that the weaponization of the vending machine appeared to be a “freak accident.”

“I’ve been here 27 years and I’ve never seen anything like this,” he said (Reuters/Yahoo!News, June 25).


Back to top
   

 

About Newswire  |  Contact National Journal  |  Re-Use Guidelines

© Copyright 2008 by National Journal Group, Inc. The material in this section is produced independently for NTI by National Journal Group, Inc. Any reproduction or retransmission, in whole or in part, is a violation of federal law and is strictly prohibited without the consent of the National Journal Group, Inc. All rights reserved.