Medical Radioactive Material Truck Stolen In Mexico 98
An anonymous reader writes "A medical radioactive material truck has been stolen just outside Mexico City. From the article: 'BBC world affairs correspondent Rajesh Mirchandani says Cobalt-60 could theoretically be used in a so-called "dirty bomb" - an explosive device that could spread radioactive material over a wide area - although there is no official suggestion this was the purpose of the theft. Mexican police are currently conducting a search for the truck and its contents and have issued a press release to alert the public to its potential dangers.'"
Already found (Score:5, Informative)
Kind of embarrassing for Slashdot to post this now, considering the truck has already been found. Apparently the container was opened, but it appears (at least most of) the Cobalt-60 is still intact.
Considering the infrastructure and expense required to ship something like this (special shielded containers, etc), why don't they include a tracking device? Even a cheapo cell phone can be used as a tracking device, which is better than nothing.
Re:Already found (Score:5, Funny)
We don't get embarrassed at Slashdot. We just post stuff and hope it gets moded up.
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And post a dupe of URL three days later.
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And of course it'll get posted again as if it were a new story.
NSA already did it (Score:3)
The NSA tracked it.
They just responded to the Mexican's request for information with a redacted report saying:
It's located right [XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX].
Good luck [XXXXXXXXXXXX] your [XXXXXXXXXXXX].
NSA
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Re:Already found (Score:5, Funny)
Apparently the container was opened, but it appears (at least most of) the Cobalt-60 is still intact.
Haha! Nothing beats a good radioactive half-life/decay joke!
Re:Already found (Score:5, Funny)
The reason why they don't include a tracking device with such shipments is because they are worried about the health effects of exposure to cell phone radiation.
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Glad they found the truck before a dupe was posted ;-)
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For me these days, maybe one article in ten is worth a few minutes of my time,
Yeah, a lot of it is just guys jerking off about how wise they are...
the scripts that run this site aren't idiots (Score:2)
Why would you insult the meta-moderation script like that? How is a script supposed to know which articles are time-sensitive? Oh, were you under the impression that some human is involved in choosing stories, aside from us users who hit the meta-mod page once a month? I don't see any sign of intelligent life.
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ALREADY BEEN RECOVERED.... (and had been for hours prior to this story being posted).
http://www.cnn.com/2013/12/04/world/americas/mexico-radioactive-theft/ [cnn.com]
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So a truck is stolen and then quickly recovered but due to the delay of getting upvoted enough to post to the front page of slashdot the 'stolen' story doesn't get posted until the 'recovered' story is already out. No problem though since the very first comment posted in this thread is one pointing this out to anyone reading the article who may not already know this.
This aparently wasn't good enough for you though, so you decided to respond to the comment pointing out the truck is already reovered with _ye
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And tonight there is a new Mexican superhero...
El Gran Hombre!
His powers stem from the fact that the radiation from the cobalt 60 made his balls grow to the size of cantaloupes, giving him the strength of 100 men (and that special something women love).
I'm working on the telenovela right now. I'm trying to decide if I should give El Gran Hombre a luchador mask. Part of me thinks it might be too cliche, but luchador masks are just so bad-ass, you know?
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"I'm trying to decide if I should give El Gran Hombre a luchador mask"
If you do, you MUST call him Strong Bad, or your audience will never forgive you.
Re:Already found (Score:5, Funny)
Strontium Bad?
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Si Si Siev errrr senior.
Say My Name (Score:2)
But what about his nemesis?:
http://www.window.state.tx.us/border/ch09/cobalto.html [state.tx.us]
"In the prison where he still awaits sentencing, the guards call him El Cobalto - the Cobalt Man."
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tracking device? this was in Mexico. ever been there? lots of places in Mexico aren't exactly high-tech.
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As if they should talk, the US can't even send their own tracking devices into mexico with working batteries.
in Mexico? (Score:1)
in Mexico? Even if they have cell coverage how good is it as weak ones can drain batteries fast.
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Re:Already found (Score:5, Interesting)
And a fine example of yellow journalism, at that. I read an earlier, more balanced new source that said the truck was a nice cargo truck, one with a crane, and it was stolen at a truck stop. Everybody thinks they wanted the truck and had no idea what it was carrying. The hysterics about terrorism in the summary are unfounded.
And I won't admit any relation to my cunning plan to manufacture refrigerators that open a Cobalt 60 door when the light goes out to keep food from ever going bad!
Especially considering dirty bomb (Score:4, Interesting)
If a dirty radiological bomb is set off and panick subsequentely kill people, you can point the finger at journalist and media not doing their proper job to inform people about the real risk.
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It wouldn't require a big blast. In Thailand in 2000 [wikipedia.org], a similar source of Cobalt-60 that was removed from it's protective container by scrappers resulting in 1900 people being significantly exposed, 10 requiring hospitalization, and 3 deaths. And that was just from a canister sitting there. Take that same amount, but atomize it in an explosion in a populated area and
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I find that some people don't even understand the difference between a 'dirty' bomb
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While the terrorism danger is overstated, the danger of the material in the hands of the unsuspecting or ignorant is pretty much the same. Someone already posted a link to the Goi
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The DOE did a study on the effects of a dirty bomb and basically came to the conclusion that the worst would be the initial blast (non-radioactive) and the panic that would ensue.
The rest would just be expensive due to cleanup. Most people's concern is not in how many tax dollars it costs after the fact but more of whether or not they are going to grow a third eye.
But yet the media makes it sound like the dirty bomb is worse i.e the area would need to be razed to the ground and uninhabitable and everyone wi
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Protip: ignore anything on
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Are you sure they didn't have a tracking device? Maybe the Mexican authorities don't want people to know about such devices on these types of shipments, if they dd say something thieves would try to disable it, or plan out there escape with the shipments. Then again saying something may deter thieves from taking shipments, I didn't read the story but I am also going to guess the Drug Cartels (or, a drug cartel) was involved.
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Or they didn't want to admit they got their batteries from the ATF.
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This has been in all of my RSS feeds all day. Some of those feeds claim that an empty truck was recovered. I'll wait a little while before I decide that all the cobalt was recovered.
Re:Already found (Score:4, Informative)
Since you bothered to post, you could have the decency to post a link...
http://www.cnn.com/2013/12/04/world/americas/mexico-radioactive-theft/ [cnn.com]
http://abcnews.go.com/International/mexican-police-find-stolen-truck-radioactive-cargo/story?id=21091737 [go.com]
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Security-Watch/2013/1204/Hijacked-radioactive-material-found-in-Mexico.-How-dangerous-was-it [csmonitor.com]
http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2013/12/4/-extremely-dangerousradioactivetheftinmexicoiaea.html [aljazeera.com]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/stolen-cobalt-60-found-abandoned/2013/12/04/7d3fe3f8-5d42-11e3-8d24-31c016b976b2_story.html [washingtonpost.com]
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I was thinking the same thing. Can you picture the schmucks who hijacked this?
Criminal 1: Hey man, I wonder what we got? Maybe a truck full of ps4/Xbox one systems?
Criminal 2: (Opens box/removes shielding) Wait..what the f...is this?
On a more serious note, a former coworker works for a shipping company that is moving the xbox ones for Microsoft.
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Did they find any truck thieves that died of acute radiation poisoning nearby?
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Reminds me of the Goiânia accident [wikipedia.org]. A modern horror story.
- "His six-year-old daughter, Leide das Neves Ferreira, later ate a sandwich while sitting on the floor. She was also fascinated by the blue glow of the powder, and applying it to her body, showed it off to her mother. Dust from the powder fell on the sandwich she was consuming"
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There are a couple of stories like that. The descriptions (complete with fairly disturbing pictures) can be downloaded from the IAEA; look for "radiological accident" or "radiological incident". For example, there's a certain model of industrial sterilizer that killed several people ... the boxes containing the items to be sterilized tended to get stuck and the operators (who were never instructed on radiation safety) entered the irradiation chamber with the radiation source being
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I read somewhere that the total load was about 40 grams of cobalt-60 -- Assuming I did the math correctly, this would result in a 5 Sv dose at a distance of 1 meter from the sample in about 30 seconds. So, about 30 seconds of exposure would be likely to kill you. Of course, since radioactivity is proportional to the inverse square of the distance poking your eyeballs up close to get a get look gives a fatal dose much more quickly.
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The cargo is the tracking device.
But it only works at night when you can see the glow.
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Thieves May Have Lethally Irradiated Themselves (Score:2)
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Kind of embarrassing for Slashdot to post this now, considering the truck has already been found. Apparently the container was opened, but it appears (at least most of) the Cobalt-60 is still intact.
That's your fault, dude. It's been in the firehose since Wednesday, why haven't you voted for or against it? FWIW I voted it up very early yesterday morning, where have you been?
Considering the infrastructure and expense required to ship something like this (special shielded containers, etc), why don't they incl
Already found (Score:2)
Probably stolen by people who didn't know what it contained.
You're too late.
Next story.
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I didn't see pictures, but if the truck had any medical supplies markings, they may have just hoped to find prescription drugs.
Already located. (Score:1)
This has happened before. (Score:3)
1984, Ciudad Juarez: http://www.johnstonsarchive.net/nuclear/radevents/1983MEX1.html [johnstonsarchive.net]
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrial_radiography [wikipedia.org] where they end up is ?????
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where they end up is ?????
Parking lots, appartently:
http://ajw.asahi.com/article/behind_news/social_affairs/AJ2011110216339 [asahi.com]
Ok, that wasn't an industrial cobalt-60 source, but still.
Could be used ... (Score:1)
Oh wait, you're telling me they're VERY dangerous? As in, more lethal than lethal? More poisonous than poison? More toxic than
Sorry. The hijack and theft of a supply truck, in an area of the world known for theft and hijacking isn't news. Sure, it's dangerous and bad. But
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You're telling me that the contents of a medical supply truck could be dangerous?!
Sure. For example, they could cause a larger loss of life than a few recent nuclear reactor meltdowns. They probably wouldn't result in the long term loss of real estate though unless someone deliberately spread the isotope via a well-designed dirty bomb.
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Could you make a 'stealth bomb' instead? Rather than spread by explosive, pose as someone spraying for insects or mix it in with paint. Spray the offices of a target organisation. People don't walk around with giger counters - it could be months before someone realises this new cluster of strange illness is focused on a single workplace, and months more before anyone thinks to try the long-shot theory of radiation poisoning. By which time some of the employees are seriously ill, all of them have an elevated
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This is why international terrorism (tm) will lose (if our respective governments wouldn't keep bigging them up) - they just don't have the imagination, intelligence and wherewithal to do things like that.
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Maybe not, but when the theft was discovered, nobody had any way of knowing if the thieves knew what they were taking. I think that the authorities were afraid that it was stolen specifically for the cobalt, and if so, if somebody was planning to build a dirty bomb for some insane reason.
Cobalt-60 is nasty stuff (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Cobalt-60 is nasty stuff (Score:4, Informative)
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Focal size (in), Expected activity (Ci)
0.120, 30 to 33
0.150, 50 to 55
0.172, 75 to 80
0.187, 100 to 110
0.217, 150 to 155
0.236, 200 to 210
0.268, 290 to 300
Goiânia Accident (Score:5, Informative)
Glad it was already found.
To understand the risks that this type of events involve check what happened in Brazil several years ago when radioactive medical material went missing and ended up killing several people
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goi%C3%A2nia_accident [wikipedia.org]
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The Mexican government and several other sources have already said that they'll know who opened the container with the Co-60 soon enough. Unless they had significant amounts of shielding they could have received a lethal dose in a few minutes. They said that just 5 minutes worth of exposure will kill the individual in about 3 days.
"Look At The Pretty Blue Stuff!" (Score:1)
I recalled this incident when I heard that story today. Some brain dead hospital admins left a machine with Caesium 137 in the hospital after it had been closed and abandoned. It was stolen and eventually ended up in the hands of people who had no idea what it was.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goi%C3%A2nia_accident [wikipedia.org]
The most chilling part is the little kid who painted designs on her chest with it.
(!!!!)
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Some brain dead hospital admins left a machine with Caesium 137 in the hospital after it had been closed and abandoned.
Glancing at the Wikipedia article, the device then became part of a lawsuit and the hospital couldn't remove the device after that from the property due to a court order. Apparently, the court did decide it was a danger and appointed guards to patrol the hospital. One of the guards didn't show (claims he was sick). The device was stolen during that time.
Found and thieves will die (Score:2)
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It's not stealing the car that will kill you, it's curiosity and greed coupled with ignorance of the radiation hazard sign.
"Oh, what's in this box? It's all locked up and covered in pretty symbols, so it must be something good." ...
All the cobalt-60 may not be accounted for (Score:1)
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Almost, but you forgot to blame Obama somehow.
A nice scenario! (Score:1)