STICH666 #76 Posted June 9, 2009 (edited) That's some CSI ****. Nothing comes close to the time this guy by my aunt passed out in his bathtub of near boiling water. The water was being gradually heated so he was not killed. He passed out then died of heat stroke. All that was left were his ankles sticking out of the water. Edited June 9, 2009 by STICH666 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BDW #77 Posted June 9, 2009 In one apartment the tenants were three months late behind in rent. I don't know how they got that far behind. Typically once they are three days late we send a letter. Because of the time for filing with the court a tenant should not be more than two months late be the time we evict them. Anyway, these tenants put holes in the walls and doors. They kicked them in, used the headboard to through against the wall. In the year they lived there I don't think they cleaned the bathroom. The refrigerator was nasty. Oh, and did I mention the human feces smeared on the walls? We charged those tenants extra to clean it up. They never paid. Then we applied to HUD for payment for the cleaning an repainting. Thank you US taxpayers. We all ended up paying the bill. Then we had someone pay timely by the third of the month. A few days later, we are not sure, he died on his couch of a heart attack. No one knew until the neighbors complained of a smell coming from the apartment and flies on the windows. The body pretty much melted into the couch and then the floor. We had to get that one cleaned up by a company that does hazardous materials. I just did the accounting for complexes. I only got to see the pictures. Wow, all of that is pretty fuckin' gross. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
shadow460 #78 Posted June 9, 2009 (edited) Atari Dogs, you remind me of some of the worst apartments I've seen. The ones I cleaned out recently didn't hold a candle to the very first "trash out" I ever did. WARNING: Stories of the nastiest people on Earth lie ahead...for the eyes of those with strong stomachs only... :woozy: I was working freelance and got a gig in a nicer section of Oklahoma City. They asked me to pick up trash for the first two hours, then to remove trash from this two bedroom apartment and, primarily, from the back yard. I go in thinking that there's a couple bags of trash in the back yard and maybe some stuff lying on the floor. lol, wrong. The entire back yard was piled three feet high in junk. Most of it was in plastic trash bags. This lady had been evicted two months prior. Most of what she had back there was kids' clothes, however, she had an oatmeal can lamp (which I still have today), some furniture, a keyboard (which I'm typing on right now), and a few other odd things. Now, trash bags do a good job at keeping water out for a day or so, but when you leave them outside long enough to get holes in them, they actuall begin to trap water. The clothes within absorb said water, and mildew forms. That was the nastiest smelling stuff I've ever encountered. Being my first trash out, I didn't have the mindset that of "hey, I'll find cooler stuff being thrown away in a cleaner apartment". I cleaned up the lamp and keyboard and brought them home. The rest I had to drag about 100 feet to the nearest parking lot to get it into my truck. It took three months to get the mildew that had run out of those trash bags out of the back of my truck. The second grossest one I've done was in Bethany, OK. The tenants had no visible floor space at all, and the apartment had flooded several times (crappy tenants and crappy management both). Management flat refused to seal up the walls to prevent flooding, so everything inside had been soaked multiple times. I don't blame these folks for hightailing it out and leaving the mess. Anyway, they'd left five pounds of potatoes in the the pantry and every single spud had gone rotten. Cleaning up the trash in the apartment wasn't bad, but the smell made two or three of us almost puke upon entry. One of the guys couldn't stop puking, so they had me switch places with him for a few days until that mess was cleaned up. On one occasion my manager got all the staff together that worked the entire complex, including one or two housekeepers, herself, and both maintenance guys. The tenants that lived there complained to a local news channel about the condition of the apartment and the roach problem. They'd had a leak from upstairs. The other maintenance guy had gone in to repair the damaged ceiling after he repaired the leak, but there was so much filth that he refused to fix the ceiling until the tenants cleaned up. I had to go fix one of their air units once, and when I walked into the place afterwards to see that it was working I about fell over. They moved out without notice, leaving almost everything behind. We took the apartment under abandonment laws, and, at the time, I had a manger who would rather just change the locks and throw everything out without any regard for the law. I think she did just that in this case. We started that trash out at 8AM sharp and did not stop until we got down to bare concrete. Furniture, clothes, appliances, carpet, everything--gone. I volunteered to go back in and spray for roaches. Not one single wall in the place had less than 100 roaches on it. I am not kidding--the walls looked as if they were flowing. I went through over a gallon of insect spray, and my sinuses were totally clogged up from it when I got through. I think I took off early that day as a result. One of the housekeepers got sick that day, too, and I think the rest of us were flipping the roaches off our bodies like they were mosquitoes. Those tenants never came back to ask for their stuff. I'm sure my manager broke the law by trashing that apartment out so soon, but since it was a health hazard, I think she did the right thing. The only thing she forgot was the biohazard suits and signs to warn the neighbors away. The last one I cleaned out featured cat crap and a stolen DTV box. Think it's only people on housing assistance? Guess which two of those above weren't getting any kind of assistance. Wanna see some nasty, nasty stuff, go clean out apartments for six months. People are just plain nasty sometimes. About half of the apartments I've been in are lavishly furnished and immaculately clean. The rest have humble furnishings and clean enough to have guests over. A few look like a specialty shop...lots of those look like computer shops are have PC parts piled everywhere, and some (like mine) look like a used game shop. A few, though, though, are each a total pig sty and I don't understand how anyone at all could have called them home. Some of the lavish apartments are leased by poor folks, some are leased by rich folks. Some of the nastiest people I've seen had not a hint of assistance at all and they drove the nicest cars in the lot. Income level has nothing to do with now trashy the people are. Edited June 9, 2009 by shadow460 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Atari Dogs #79 Posted June 9, 2009 Atari Dogs, you remind me of some of the worst apartments I've seen. The ones I cleaned out recently didn't hold a candle to the very first "trash out" I ever did. WARNING: Stories of the nastiest people on Earth lie ahead...for the eyes of those with strong stomachs only... :woozy: I was working freelance and got a gig in a nicer section of Oklahoma City. They asked me to pick up trash for the first two hours, then to remove trash from this two bedroom apartment and, primarily, from the back yard. I go in thinking that there's a couple bags of trash in the back yard and maybe some stuff lying on the floor. lol, wrong. The entire back yard was piled three feet high in junk. Most of it was in plastic trash bags. This lady had been evicted two months prior. Most of what she had back there was kids' clothes, however, she had an oatmeal can lamp (which I still have today), some furniture, a keyboard (which I'm typing on right now), and a few other odd things. Now, trash bags do a good job at keeping water out for a day or so, but when you leave them outside long enough to get holes in them, they actuall begin to trap water. The clothes within absorb said water, and mildew forms. That was the nastiest smelling stuff I've ever encountered. Being my first trash out, I didn't have the mindset that of "hey, I'll find cooler stuff being thrown away in a cleaner apartment". I cleaned up the lamp and keyboard and brought them home. The rest I had to drag about 100 feet to the nearest parking lot to get it into my truck. It took three months to get the mildew that had run out of those trash bags out of the back of my truck. The second grossest one I've done was in Bethany, OK. The tenants had no visible floor space at all, and the apartment had flooded several times (crappy tenants and crappy management both). Management flat refused to seal up the walls to prevent flooding, so everything inside had been soaked multiple times. I don't blame these folks for hightailing it out and leaving the mess. Anyway, they'd left five pounds of potatoes in the the pantry and every single spud had gone rotten. Cleaning up the trash in the apartment wasn't bad, but the smell made two or three of us almost puke upon entry. One of the guys couldn't stop puking, so they had me switch places with him for a few days until that mess was cleaned up. On one occasion my manager got all the staff together that worked the entire complex, including one or two housekeepers, herself, and both maintenance guys. The tenants that lived there complained to a local news channel about the condition of the apartment and the roach problem. They'd had a leak from upstairs. The other maintenance guy had gone in to repair the damaged ceiling after he repaired the leak, but there was so much filth that he refused to fix the ceiling until the tenants cleaned up. I had to go fix one of their air units once, and when I walked into the place afterwards to see that it was working I about fell over. They moved out without notice, leaving almost everything behind. We took the apartment under abandonment laws, and, at the time, I had a manger who would rather just change the locks and throw everything out without any regard for the law. I think she did just that in this case. We started that trash out at 8AM sharp and did not stop until we got down to bare concrete. Furniture, clothes, appliances, carpet, everything--gone. I volunteered to go back in and spray for roaches. Not one single wall in the place had less than 100 roaches on it. I am not kidding--the walls looked as if they were flowing. I went through over a gallon of insect spray, and my sinuses were totally clogged up from it when I got through. I think I took off early that day as a result. One of the housekeepers got sick that day, too, and I think the rest of us were flipping the roaches off our bodies like they were mosquitoes. Those tenants never came back to ask for their stuff. I'm sure my manager broke the law by trashing that apartment out so soon, but since it was a health hazard, I think she did the right thing. The only thing she forgot was the biohazard suits and signs to warn the neighbors away. The last one I cleaned out featured cat crap and a stolen DTV box. Think it's only people on housing assistance? Guess which two of those above weren't getting any kind of assistance. Wanna see some nasty, nasty stuff, go clean out apartments for six months. People are just plain nasty sometimes. About half of the apartments I've been in are lavishly furnished and immaculately clean. The rest have humble furnishings and clean enough to have guests over. A few look like a specialty shop...lots of those look like computer shops are have PC parts piled everywhere, and some (like mine) look like a used game shop. A few, though, though, are each a total pig sty and I don't understand how anyone at all could have called them home. Some of the lavish apartments are leased by poor folks, some are leased by rich folks. Some of the nastiest people I've seen had not a hint of assistance at all and they drove the nicest cars in the lot. Income level has nothing to do with now trashy the people are. Yep, that sounds worse than the ones I saw pictures of. The only thing left out was the one they told me about that had the dildo and used condoms, and drugs. We had a few shootings at that complex too. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites