Los Angeles Crime Scene Cleanup

888-431-7233

 

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Los Angeles Crime Scene Cleanup Services for less than $1,000.* Call Eddie Evans now. Read his comments below.


Los Angeles residents must expect their crime scene cleanup company to offer the following:

  • Competitive Prices
  • Full Service Cleaning
  • Odor Reduction
  • Reasonable Response Time

What to expect from Eddie Evans

  • Pay less than $1,000.
  • Guaranteed Fixed Price
  • Reasonable Response Time
  • Telephone Quote
  • Odor Reduction if not removal.
  • Guaranteed Work
  • Guaranteed return upon request.

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Eddie Evans

I am a professional cleaner. Besides general cleaning like power washing; carpet cleaning; wool rug cleaning; upholstery cleaning; natural stone restoration and cleaning, I work as a crime scene cleanup practitioner in Los Angeles County. Native to Los Angeles County, I have over nine years as a biohazard cleanup practitioner (crime scene cleaner) doing business as a self-employed businessman.

My trauma cleanup experience includes military trauma cleanup. As a result, my death cleanup experience exceeds ten years of solo death cleanup experience.

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My Los Angeles County Prices

Many times clients have asked, "How come your prices are so much lower than the other guys I called?". I can only reply with this truth. I charge what I believe are fair and reasonable prices. If I charge $800 for a homicide in Lakewood or Long Beach, it's because I live so close to the crime scene. If I charge $900 for a suicide in Palm Dale, it's because I live some distance from the suicide cleanup work.

Very rarely do I charge less than $400. I have an "out the door" price of $350. If I cannot get $350, it's hardly worth my time. I must pay income tax, and after income tax, I'm not getting $350. Plus, most types of Los Angeles biohazard cleanup work take some effort, skill, and willingness to handle horrific work.

Very rarely do I charge more than $1,000. One, I have no employees to compensate with a pay check, workman's compensation, vacations, medical insurance, and retirement plans. Two, whatever I charge usually rewards me fully with plenty of profit for one or two day's work. Besides, most homicide, suicide, and unattended death work in Los Angeles County takes less than a full day, if not three to six hours. Even when I do need to go back a second day, I'm still making good money, in my opinion. As a former high school teacher (English) my prices match and exceed my teaching pay easily. Three, I actually enjoy my work and believe that I'm performing a valuable service to families in great need of a very special service. To use a cliche, when I work at Los Angeles crime scene cleanup jobs, it's a win-win situation for me and my clients. What more could one ask from a small business?

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I write crime scene cleanup content for many web sites. I do this because of crime scene cleanup corruption. I explain Orange County, California government crime scene cleanup cronyism (corruption) on many pages. I use Orange County consumer fraud as a model for How Crime Scene Cleanup Works. It works by fraud in local government offices, mostly. I know this by virtue of my experience marketing crime scene cleanup nationwide for a number of years; a task I no longer perform, it showed me how coroner and other government employees created a monopoly over crime scene cleanup.

For example, do a Bellflower crime scene cleanup Internet web search on Ask, Bing, Google, and Yahoo!. You'll find my telephone number (888-431-7233) over represented by 1 to 4 or 1 to 5. Do another one for Downey, where I attended high school, and you'll find similar results for my Los Angeles County crime scene cleanup web pages. Now I'd say I'm over due for some sort of biohazard cleanup work in Bellflower, California.

I closed many of these web pages for professional blood cleanup as government monopolies grew. Sure, legitimate competition arose too. I believe, and with good reason, many of my emerging competitors were involved in crony capitalism as government employees cashed in. Bloodborne pathogen legislation pressured employers to use trained blood cleanup employees. Little did they or others know, training for this type of biohazard cleanup can be found for $20 on the Internet.

I find we tend to place a halo over police officers because of their social role, to "serve and protect," as we find in our Los Angeles Police Department. For the truth of the matter, we recruit police officers from our general population. We train them in Police Officers Standards and Training, and turn them lose on our streets.

A vast majority of these police officers perform dangerous, exasperating work for prolonged periods of time. Their lives contain more stress producing situations in any one month than many of us will experience in a life time. Then there's that tiny minority of ignorant, bigoted police officers that abuse their power of authority to expose their own ideological and moral standards.

This last group I would categorize with so many of the coroner and other employees in their Los Angeles death administration roles. These roles serve these same character types for personal profit. They give no more thought to their transgressions than our small minority of ignorant police officers in our Los Angeles Police Department (Chief Davis below). It doesn't take many to create a lot of damage and expense for individual tax payers and our society in general.

The ignorant police officer character type tends to live in an extroverted manner. He sees his whiteness as a form of racial superiority (see Social Darwinism) and those lower on his racial hierarchy of value become targets for verbal bullying if not bullying by force. Under Chief Parker's leadership, in 1963, police violence rose dramatically in black neighborhoods. Sixty blacks were killed by patrolmen from 1963 to 1965. Of these victims, twenty-five were unarmed and twenty-seven were shot in the back. Let me repeat this last phrase: twenty-seven were shot in the back. Perhaps we could explain one or two civilians shot in the back in unusual circumstances, but not twenty-seven.

What this tells me is that a manufactured, discriminatory, racial prejudice permitted Los Angeles Police ranks during this period of time. And again, I wish not to paint with too wide a brush. Probably the majority of Los Angeles Police Officers were no different than most other people. Perhaps many were racially prejudiced, which would reflect a common racism in the United States during this period of time. Our military ranks had only desegregated ten years before; Taladiga, Alabama still had white-and-black public drinking fountains, public restrooms, and so forth.

People of color did not expect to find dignity on Los Angeles streets under white police officer surveillance in these days. We recruited police officers from racist families and continue to do so. This happens to reflect our national demographics. Things of changed mightily though, but continue to lack a full share of equality among minority groups. (See my comments on theories of race and racism).

So our Los Angeles history tells us that our Los Angeles Police Department had its share of "bad apples." Getting beyond our media's stereotypical police office as found on Dragnet, Adam-12, Police Story, and others, we find police officers suffers the same slings and arrows as the rest of us, generally. If they lack an enhanced social consciousness availing itself to honoring diversity among people, it's because of their environment. We've made progress into changing attitudes in this regard, but social change takes generations, usually.

 

Artesia - Bellflower - Calabasas - Carson - Castaic - Cerritos - Downey - El Segundo - Florance - Gardena - Hawaiian Gardens - Irwindale - Juniper Hills -- Kineolla Mesa - Long Beach - Los Angeles - Manhatten - Norwalk - Pasadena - Quartz Hill - Redondo - Santa Clara - Santa Clarita - Torrance - Val Verde Westlake

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Corruption in Crime Scene Cleanup


I've shown in a number of ways how crime scene cleanup corruption grew in local government.

 

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Eddie Evans - Prices

 


 

* This price covers Los Angeles County death cleanups involving small caliber handguns, knives, razors, and other weapons causing fatal bleedouts. Extreme trauma to victims of violence by large caliber handguns, large caliber rifles and shotguns must expect to pay more. Usually around $1,400 to $1,900 prices should be expected for massive trauma. I must charge more because massive, traumatic injuries create many issues leading to intense cleaning over a wide area. Also, at times, entire rooms must be sealed following many disinfections and inspections.

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The City of Bell's crime scene cleanup continues as six defendants from City Hall faced a Los Angeles County judge. Plea deals offered these six a deal worth considering.

Offers for deals are "off the table." DA's personnel intend to zero-in on several of these people. They paid themselves for doing almost no work. What they did included a solid waste authority, a solid waste of money. They held phony commission hearings in which they paid themselves thousands of dollars.

This scandal has placed Bell into jeopardy, a terrible condition for this lower paid working-class neighborhood. Their lawyers will argue that what they've done is not illegal. Prosecutes intend to get Rico, city administrator, who paid himself over one million dollars.

They wrote their own lucrative contracts that were not approved by the city counsel.

This city paid out over ten million dollars in corrupt money for work never done. Its city administrator, Rizzoli, gained $1.5 million in corrupt money. Los Angeles County District Attorney, Mr. Steve Cooley, became concerned over these matters. He feels that Rizzo acted like an "unelected and unaccountable czar" by using Bell's treasury as his personal cash cow.

Hearings will focus on council members and their bogus commissions. From these commissions they made money, even though commissions did not hold meetings. This sort of behavior amounts to what many observers call a "misappropriation of tax payer money."

Now, we must learn if Rizzo and Spaccia stole tax payer money in other ways. Mr. Rizzo has been implicated in records editing to cover his alleged loans to himself and other city employees, loans total $1.9 million.

A Mr. Dennis Tarango, hired by Bell for privately contracting plans, owns racehorses that he and Mr. Rizzo share. Mr. Tarango received about $10.4 million in city funds since 1995. A state controller's office reported this sum, indicating an undisclosed personal welfare program for Mr. Tarango.

Corruption on steroids found in our Orange County Consumer Fraud page reports, in some ways resembles this type of fraud against taxpayers. Unlike this Bell fraud, Orange County Government's fraud dwells deeply in the county's bowels, practically beyond perception, but for this writers efforts to unveil government fraud. Unlike crime scene cleanup in Bell, Orange County crime scene cleanup must take more time because of my solo efforts in exposing corrupted civil servents.

Other corruption at the city level in Los Angeles County includes a Temple City mayor who pleaded no contest to a bribery case. These days many people hate government, and corruption cases do not help matters any. It is a shame that exposing coroner fraud will do more to undercut public trust in their local government agencies, but what can one do?

At least Sheriff Baca has placed light where there's obscuring smoke. Rep. Peer King (R-NY) claims that Muslims create problems for law enforcement, a charge our sheriff blasts. He challanges dip-shit King to visit Los Angeles County and see for himself. Muslim's play an important role in our fight against crime and terrrorism. Crime scene cleanup in Los Angeles County has a brighter side, we find in our Los Angeles Government.

 

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