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I assure you all that is my blood and it wasnt fun gushing it out. I was alone at the time too.
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hahahahahaha I'm flattered :) Hey Motts, Yaggy said you have some great spots up in NY. I'd love to come check them out man. Hit me back goddog215@hotmail.com
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AWESOME, AWESOME SHOT !
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For some reason that reminds of the movie Evil Dead
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Ahhh my stencil is better :)
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All of these labs were a result of the testing that a major drug manufacturer sponsored. I assume that they did testing and experiments on patients and probably animals as there is the rooftop lab
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I remeber there being doors around 94'-95'
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There's not a living thing left in there today. Not rats, not bugs, nothing. A decent amount of skeletal remains, but nothing alive.
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no electricity here that light coming in through a ventin the ceiling
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ITS MELTED PLEXI GLASS
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thats kewl too.
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thats pretty kool
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what the heck is that??????
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Who pays the electric bill for that???????????
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Yeah I asked someone about that, the law was passed a while back, when refrigerators latched closed (now they use a weak magnet to seal the doors).

A little research revealed that refrigerator doors manufactured prior to 1958 had mechanical latches which were impossible to open from the inside. Kids would wind up playing in discarded refrigerators and wind up locking themselves in; the sealed door prevented and screams from being heard, and they would eventually suffocate. The New York Times published a figure of 115 children dying this way in over a decade long period before 1955.

Congress passed the Refrigerator Safety Act in 1956, and attempts to smash the latches off the remaining unused refrigerators has since minimized these incidents.

But, this law only applies to household refrigerators, not commercial or morgue freezers.