Here are the specs of the incinerator purchased by DM
Plenty of capacity ... up to 500 pounds at a time
the incinerator may I remind you costs $15,ooo....that is very expensive to cremate animals when most animal rescue groups are Against killing....written loudly in there Goal statements ...they recue animals avoid ont human societies who KIll them...euthanize than...I worked as a volunteer rescue feral kittens....The last thing North Toronto cat recue wanted to hear was animals being KILLED!....Jubaloee...you were the first person who asked me and stated when Bessie posted NO FARMS OR AIRPOSTS in Canada require BY LAAW THAT AN INCIDERATOR be on their property ....now you stated again post #718 (above)......
"Hi Arnie and welcome. I actually put forth the same idea some time ago that it could be used to cremate small animals because it was posted that his uncle either runs or works at an animal clinic, or as a private business because pet cremation is so outrageously expensive, or that it could have possibly been bought to dispose of the 'road kill' of the skies when they were preparing to repair planes at the hanger. I like your idea about it possibly being tied to one of WM's charities, a lot of old ideas get twisted and repackaged, so it's refreshing to hear some new ideas, and I personally appreciate seeing another new open mind in the forum."..quoted Jubalee.... you asked me where you said planes and road KILL" ..robynhood!
Hi Arnie and welcome. I actually put forth the same idea some time ago that it could be used to cremate small animals because it was posted that his uncle either runs or works at an animal clinic, or as a private business because pet cremation is so outrageously expensive, or that it could have possibly been bought to dispose of the 'road kill' of the skies when they were preparing to repair planes at the hanger. I like your idea about it possibly being tied to one of WM's charities, a lot of old ideas get twisted and repackaged, so it's refreshing to hear some new ideas, and I personally appreciate seeing another new open mind in the forum. I wonder if perhaps it could have been involved a charity to help shelters or even lower income families cremate the remains of beloved pets when they cannot afford outside services? It is an interesting angle that I don't think has been approached yet.
But the truth is we don't know what it was bought for, although we have learned that it was bought by an employee, so perhaps that employee was the one who had nefarious plans. Also, we don't know that LB was abducted, but her parents seem to strongly believe that she left from what I can gather and that she will return home when she is ready, and I hope and pray that they are right. From what I recall, her parents had nothing but nice things to say about DM, even before it was announced that he wasn't the last person to contact her. The point is, that if my neighbour went missing last month, and I also bought a chain saw last month, and I have no trees, does that mean I murdered my neighbour? Maybe I took up ice carving, or want to learn to juggle them.
You are right, he could have been doing other things with it that we haven't even guessed at, for all we know he bought it to dispose of the rotting animals his dog kept rolling in. (I am half joking here, because I fully remember the the way my country dog had to roll in every smelly carcass or turd pile he encountered, thank you for posting that 2hope4, it brought back some memories!)
Linda Babcock remembered Millard as a "polite and handsome" man who, to her knowledge, was never romantically involved with her daughter, although she said the two were friends.
When a person (family) owns a corporation all equipment , tools , supplies , vehicles , fuel, repairs etc will be purchased thru the corporation so that would be considered normal
DM would simply instruct his company purchasing agent to acquire the needed equipment (incinerator) , a couple of phone calls to the Manitoba distributor and it would be on the way. DW wouldnt even have to open his wallet or do anything except maybe sign his own company purchase order as an internal policy requirement.
When owners of corporations use vehicles for personal or recreational purposes the year end accounting will put that (usually small) portion of use into the column of personal income tax (of the user) ... the greater part of the cost is born by the corporation and is a corporate expense taxwise
I would still be curious what DM would have told his staff the reason for an incinerator ... I am sure the question would have come up .... not many aviator-car-guys have a need for a crematorium .
best wishes
AM
Juballee, the difference between a crematorium and incinerator appears to boil down to the retrieval of the remains and both can be used for once living creatures.Also, I believe an incinerator and a crematorium are two different things. I believe anyone can run an incinerator (many apartment complexes have them for their trash still) but that you need a special licence to run a crematorium.
As a pilot, I can safely say there is no need of anything to dispose of any such "roadkill in the sky."
Mid air contact with birds almost always severely damages aircraft or at the least they must immediately(prudently) land to determine damage extent.
Whether mid air impact of non rotating element(wings, fuselage-windshield)or rotating elements(engines) there is not enough left to warrant the purchase of an incinerator.
If disposal of aviation fuel products is even contemplated, think of the Environmental aspects of burning leaded fuels(avgas/100LL) with a poultry incinerator, to the atmosphere---it's laughable. However comedic that scenario is, it would still require some accommodation of "The Law." Meaning flue gas scrubbers etc., to "clean" the emissions to an acceptable level, which is quite a permitting, and construction project in itself.
No....... reasonable inductive reasoning favors, at the very least, an unreasonable purchase and imagined nefarious use of the incinerator given the condition of TB's remains and the freakish nature of this case.
Couldn't agree with you more Archangel7. As a pilot as well, I've had a couple of bird strikes and one dodge the coyote on the runway scene-it's certainly not an everyday occurrence and I find it seasonal. If the birds ended up dying, they also ended up in some farmers corn field about a mile away from the airport. Produced more dents in the fuselage than anything else. I've had periods where I'm an airport rat, been in many airports across the country along with numerous maintenance facilities-both large and small and have never, never, never seen an incinerator or crematorium. Sounds like the makings of a S King novel or incentive to make sure your AME gets paid!! :scared:As a pilot, I can safely say there is no need of anything to dispose of any such "roadkill in the sky."
Mid air contact with birds almost always severely damages aircraft or at the least they must immediately(prudently) land to determine damage extent.
Whether mid air impact of non rotating element(wings, fuselage-windshield)or rotating elements(engines) there is not enough left to warrant the purchase of an incinerator.
If disposal of aviation fuel products is even contemplated, think of the Environmental aspects of burning leaded fuels(avgas/100LL) with a poultry incinerator, to the atmosphere---it's laughable. However comedic that scenario is, it would still require some accommodation of "The Law." Meaning flue gas scrubbers etc., to "clean" the emissions to an acceptable level, which is quite a permitting, and construction project in itself.
No....... reasonable inductive reasoning favors, at the very least, an unreasonable purchase and imagined nefarious use of the incinerator given the condition of TB's remains and the freakish nature of this case.
Juballee, the difference between a crematorium and incinerator appears to boil down to the retrieval of the remains and both can be used for once living creatures.
http://hammondenvironmental.com/index.php?p=1_10
Also Ontario regulations for dead animal disposal
http://www.omafra.gov.on.ca/english/engineer/facts/09-025.htm#4
Dispose of all deadstock within 48 hr of its death or immediately, if it begins to putrefy before 48 hr have passed.
As a pilot, I can safely say there is no need of anything to dispose of any such "roadkill in the sky."
Mid air contact with birds almost always severely damages aircraft or at the least they must immediately(prudently) land to determine damage extent.
Whether mid air impact of non rotating element(wings, fuselage-windshield)or rotating elements(engines) there is not enough left to warrant the purchase of an incinerator.
If disposal of aviation fuel products is even contemplated, think of the Environmental aspects of burning leaded fuels(avgas/100LL) with a poultry incinerator, to the atmosphere---it's laughable. However comedic that scenario is, it would still require some accommodation of "The Law." Meaning flue gas scrubbers etc., to "clean" the emissions to an acceptable level, which is quite a permitting, and construction project in itself.
No....... reasonable inductive reasoning favors, at the very least, an unreasonable purchase and imagined nefarious use of the incinerator given the condition of TB's remains and the freakish nature of this case.