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SAN FERNANDO VALLEY MAN SENTENCED TO FIVE YEARS IN PRISON FOR ILLEGALLY STORING TOXIC AND EXPLOSIVE HAZARDOUS WASTE IN HIS BACKYARD

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 15, 2011

LOS ANGELES – A Reseda man has been sentenced to five years in federal prison for illegally storing toxic and explosive hazardous wastes in his backyard, materials that posed an imminent danger to nearby residents. The sentence is the longest handed down by a California federal judge in a hazardous waste case.

Edward Wyman, 64, was convicted of the felony environmental crime on April 5, 2011, by a federal jury following a five-day trial. In addition to convicting Wyman of violating the federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), the jury made a special finding that Wyman’s conduct knowingly placed another person in imminent danger of death or serious bodily injury.

In handing down the five year sentence, United States District Judge George H. King stated that “[t]hese are not victimless or hyper-technical offenses,” but rather constituted “a real and present danger” to Wyman’s family and neighbors. Judge King also ordered that Wyman pay $800,000 to the United States Environmental Protection Agency for costs associated with a 47 day clean-up response. During the clean-up, USEPA contractors were forced to call out the Los Angeles Police Department Bomb and Arson Squad officers seven separate times to deal with possible explosives mixed into the burned debris.

Wyman was charged in June 2009, soon after firefighters responded to a report of a fire and explosions at Wyman’s residence. Because of the ammunition that was being “cooked off” in the fire, firefighters had to wear bullet proof vests. Investigators at the scene discovered a large cache of toxic materials, including thousands of rounds of corroded ammunition, highly reactive lead-contaminated waste from shooting ranges, hundreds of pounds of decades-old gunpowder and military M6 cannon powder, and industrial solvents that contained 1,1,1-trichloroethane and tetrachloroethylene (two potent chemicals that are listed as hazardous substances under federal law). Wyman did not have a permit to store any of the materials.

"This sentence demonstrates the serious nature of federal environmental crimes," according to United States Attorney André Birotte Jr.  "Federal environmental regulations exist to protect both public safety and the environment.  The Department of Justice is committed to protecting the environment and to prosecuting persons who  threaten the community through their illegal actions."

This case is the result of an investigation by the United States Environmental Protection Agency and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

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Release No. 11-159a

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