Before you immediately accuse the sheriff or deputy of crass ignorance, he was referring to anhydrous ammonium nitrate, which was the explosive is in
OKC (with the addition of some fuel oil). Ammonium nitrate solution will not explode, AFAIK, and is regularly transported around the country in
tankers by rail and even by road. The deputy, being in a rural area, and one where AN was actively being produced, would have known this. Also, solid
AN, anhydrous, is regularly used by farmers in Texas , with a bit of old oil, plus a blasting cap, to blow up trees etc. off agricultural land. AN
decomposes explosively at 210C, IIRC, and detonates. Hence the deputy is perfectly correct. In other words, you are talking out of your ass. The
legal angle is that AH is known to detonate if heated enough, and an arsonist, for example, could have, set a storehouse on fire – a criminal act.
If the problem is a manufacturing or handling prblem, OSHA investigates - after LE has established a cause, if it can, or simultaneously as an aid to
LE. Surely you can see you have it ass backwards, can’t you? What the hell has meth to do with it?
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