The Massachusetts attorney general has sued a property owner and a contractor hired to demolish a shed on his property for costs associated with a fire and explosion that authorities say released a toxic soup into the environment.
The attorney general’s office said Thursday the fire in the fall of 2016 during the demolition of Edgar Muntz’s shed in Shrewsbury polluted the air and ground with dynamite, hydrofluoric acid, mercury, sodium cyanide, arsenic, chloroform, toluene, and chromium.
Authorities say for months the soil repeatedly broke into spontaneous chemical fires.
The attorney general is seeking civil penalties, damages and an injunction requiring the defendants to conduct further cleanup.
A listed number for Muntz was no longer in service. The phone at P&M Asphalt Services Inc. of Sutton repeatedly rang busy.
Topics Lawsuits Massachusetts
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Most Are Overcharged for Property Insurance, Vanderbilt Study Says
Florida Woman Drives Elevated Pickup Over Lamborghini Sports Car in Parking Lot
Specialty Insurance Rates Soften Faster Than Expected, Hitting 2020 Price Levels: WTW
After Greg Biffle Plane Crash, Police Think ‘Friends’ Stole From His NC Home 

