Found Drugs in an Evicted Denver Unit — Here’s Exactly What Happens

Law Enforcement Protocol · 3 Scenarios · Documented

Found Drugs in an Evicted Denver Unit — Here’s Exactly What Happens

Pipes, baggies, suspicious substances, or evidence of a drug operation — our crew finds it all during Denver eviction cleanouts. Here is our documented protocol for every scenario, from paraphernalia to crime scene.

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Never Touch Substances
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If drugs or drug evidence are found during a Denver eviction cleanout, our crew never touches the substances. The response depends on severity: paraphernalia only gets disposed of as trash, small quantities of suspected drugs trigger a law enforcement non-emergency call, and large quantities or evidence of dealing triggers a 911 call and full crew evacuation. Everything is documented on timestamped video. Law enforcement takes custody of all controlled substances. Call (303) 324-6014 for eviction cleanout coordination.

The Reality: Drugs in Eviction Units Are Common

Drug-related findings are one of the most common discoveries during Denver eviction cleanouts. In our experience, roughly 1 in 4 eviction units contains some form of drug paraphernalia, and a smaller percentage contain actual substances. This isn’t unusual — substance abuse is a leading cause of lease violations and evictions.

The critical thing for property managers and landlords to understand: how you handle drug discoveries affects your liability. Touching, moving, or improperly disposing of controlled substances can create legal problems for you. Our protocol exists to keep you — and our crew — legally protected.

3 Scenarios — 3 Protocols

Not every drug-related discovery is the same. A glass pipe in a nightstand is fundamentally different from a bag of white powder on a kitchen table. Our crew is trained to assess what they’re looking at and follow the correct protocol for the severity level.

A
Paraphernalia Only — No Substances Present

Glass pipes, bongs, rolling papers, grinders, vape cartridges (empty), spoons with residue, cut straws, razor blades with residue, roach clips. No visible drugs, powders, pills, or plant material beyond trace residue on paraphernalia.

Colorado context: Colorado decriminalized marijuana paraphernalia with legalization. Paraphernalia associated with other substances (meth pipes, crack pipes, heroin spoons) is still technically illegal to possess under CRS 18-18-428, but in practice, empty paraphernalia without substances is treated as trash during eviction cleanouts.

1.Crew photographs the items in place — timestamped, showing location in unit
2.Items disposed of as trash — glass pipes wrapped to prevent breakage in bags, sharps in sharps container
3.Noted in documentation package — landlord receives record of what was found and where
4.Cleanout continues normally — no work stoppage, no law enforcement contact needed
B
Small Quantities of Suspected Drugs

A baggie with powder or crystal residue. A few pills not in a prescription bottle. A small amount of plant material that isn’t marijuana (or marijuana in quantities exceeding personal use). A single syringe with substance inside. Any substance our crew cannot positively identify.

The rule: If our crew sees a substance and isn’t 100% certain it’s legal, they treat it as a controlled substance. We don’t test, taste, smell, or identify drugs. That’s law enforcement’s job.

1.Stop work in the immediate area — do not disturb the substance or container
2.Do not touch the substance — fentanyl and other synthetics can be absorbed through skin contact
3.Isolate the area — close the door, mark it as off-limits
4.Document on video — from the doorway, do not re-enter the room
5.Call law enforcement non-emergency line — Denver Police (720) 913-2000 or the on-site sheriff deputy
6.Law enforcement responds — they test, identify, and take custody of the substance
7.Cleanout resumes after law enforcement clears the area — typically 1-2 hours
C
Large Quantities / Evidence of Drug Dealing or Manufacturing

Multiple bags of substances. Scales, baggies-within-baggies, large amounts of cash, cutting agents, packaging materials. Chemical containers, lab equipment, stained surfaces suggesting drug manufacturing (meth labs). Any quantity that clearly exceeds personal use. Firearms combined with drug evidence (see our firearms protocol).

This is a potential crime scene. The unit may contain evidence of drug trafficking or manufacturing. Our crew’s safety and your legal protection both require the highest-level response.

1.Stop ALL work immediately — entire unit, not just the room
2.Evacuate the entire crew from the unit — nobody re-enters for any reason
3.Call 911 — this is a crime scene until law enforcement determines otherwise
4.Do not touch anything — substances, cash, equipment, or packaging are potential evidence
5.Document from outside the unit — video of the unit entrance and exterior only, do not re-enter to film
6.Law enforcement secures the scene — may involve detectives, narcotics unit, or DEA depending on scale
7.Cleanout pauses indefinitely — could be hours, could be days. We return only after law enforcement fully clears the property

Meth Lab Contamination — A Special Case

If evidence suggests the unit was used as a methamphetamine lab — chemical stains on surfaces, strong chemical odors (ammonia, ether, acetone), lab equipment (glass tubes, heating elements, chemical containers), ventilation modifications — the situation goes beyond drug evidence into environmental contamination.

Colorado has specific regulations for meth-contaminated properties. Under the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) guidelines:

  • The property must be tested by a certified industrial hygienist before any cleanup begins
  • If meth residue exceeds 0.5 micrograms per 100 cm², the property must be decontaminated by a certified contractor
  • The property cannot be re-occupied until post-decontamination testing confirms levels are below the standard
  • The landlord must disclose prior meth contamination to future tenants

JSD does not perform meth decontamination. If we suspect a former meth lab, we follow the Scenario C protocol (evacuate, call 911) and add a referral to a CDPHE-certified decontamination contractor. The cleanout cannot proceed until testing and any required remediation are complete.

Fentanyl Safety — Why We Never Touch Substances

Fentanyl has changed the risk profile of drug discoveries during eviction cleanouts. Here is what property managers need to know:

  • Fentanyl is present in the Denver drug supply — it’s found in heroin, counterfeit pills, cocaine, and methamphetamine. Any unknown powder or pill could contain fentanyl.
  • Skin absorption risk is debated but real in concentrated form — our crew follows the most conservative protocol: no contact with any unknown substance, period.
  • Airborne exposure risk during disturbance — sweeping, vacuuming, or moving materials that contain fentanyl powder can aerosolize it.
  • Our crews carry Narcan (naloxone) — every crew lead has a Narcan kit as a precaution. We’ve never had to use one, and our protocol is designed to keep it that way.

This is why Scenario B exists as a distinct protocol. Even a small quantity of unknown substance triggers a full stop in that area because we cannot determine what it is by looking at it.

Colorado Drug Laws — What Landlords Need to Know

Colorado’s approach to drug possession has evolved significantly. Here is the current legal landscape as it relates to eviction cleanouts:

  • Marijuana is legal — possession up to 2 oz by adults 21+. However, landlords can still prohibit marijuana use in lease agreements, and growing operations that damage the property are grounds for eviction and damage claims.
  • HB 19-1263 (2019) — reclassified possession of 4 grams or less of most Schedule I and II substances from a felony to a misdemeanor. Law enforcement may respond differently to small quantities.
  • Proposition 122 (2022) — decriminalized personal use of psilocybin (mushrooms), DMT, ibogaine, and mescaline for adults 21+. Paraphernalia associated with these substances is treated similarly to marijuana paraphernalia.
  • Manufacturing and distribution remain serious felonies regardless of substance type or quantity.
  • Landlord liability: If you know drugs are in your unit and fail to report it, you could face charges under CRS 18-18-112 (maintaining a drug premises). Our documentation and law enforcement referral protect you from this.

What Our Documentation Includes for Drug Discoveries

For every drug-related finding, our documentation package includes:

  • Timestamped video of the discovery — showing location in unit, type of items found, and crew response
  • Still photographs of all items from multiple angles
  • Written log entry — description of what was found, which scenario protocol was followed, and outcome
  • Law enforcement case number (for Scenarios B and C) — proving you reported the finding
  • Chain of custody record — documenting that substances went to law enforcement, not to the landlord, crew, or trash

This documentation protects you from tenant claims (“they stole my property”), from law enforcement scrutiny (“why didn’t you report it”), and from insurance disputes (“did you follow proper procedures”).

Eviction Cleanout Pricing

Studio / 1BR
$495–$895
2-3 Bedroom
$895–$1,500
Full House
$1,500–$2,500

Drug discoveries (Scenario A) do not affect pricing. Scenarios B and C may pause the cleanout but do not add cost unless a return visit is needed.

Full eviction cleanout pricing breakdown here.

Drugs Found During Eviction FAQ

What should I do if I find drugs in an evicted unit before JSD arrives?
Do not touch the substances. Do not flush them, throw them away, or put them in a bag. Close the door to the room where you found them, call Denver Police non-emergency at (720) 913-2000, and wait for an officer. Then call us at (303) 324-6014 to schedule the cleanout after law enforcement has cleared the area. You want a police report showing you reported the finding — that’s your legal protection.
Can I just flush the drugs and skip the law enforcement call?
We strongly advise against it. Flushing drugs destroys evidence and eliminates your documentation trail. If the former tenant later claims you stole their “property” (yes, this happens), you have no proof of what was found or what happened to it. Additionally, improperly disposing of controlled substances can create liability. Let law enforcement handle it — they take custody, you get a report number, everyone is protected.
What about marijuana? Colorado legalized it.
Small quantities of marijuana (under 2 oz) and standard paraphernalia fall under Scenario A — photographed, documented, disposed of as trash. However, large-scale growing operations (more than 6 plants, especially with evidence of sales) fall under Scenario C because commercial cultivation without a license is still illegal. The damage from grow operations (moisture, mold, electrical modifications) is documented separately for your damage claim against the tenant.
Does finding drugs delay the eviction cleanout?
Scenario A (paraphernalia): No delay at all. Scenario B (small quantities): Typically 1-2 hours while law enforcement responds and secures the substance — we continue working in other areas of the unit. Scenario C (large quantities/dealing evidence): The cleanout may pause entirely for hours or days if law enforcement treats the unit as a crime scene. We return as soon as they clear the property.
Is there an extra charge if drugs are found?
Not for Scenarios A or B. For Scenario C, if the cleanout must be rescheduled because law enforcement holds the scene, a return visit may be needed at additional cost. We discuss this with you before any additional charges. If we can complete the cleanout on the same day after law enforcement clears, there’s no extra fee.
What if we suspect fentanyl?
Any unknown powder or pills automatically trigger Scenario B protocol. Our crew cannot and will not attempt to identify substances. We treat every unknown substance as potentially dangerous. The area is isolated, law enforcement is contacted, and no one re-enters until the substance is removed. Our crew leads carry Narcan as an emergency precaution, but our protocol is designed to prevent any exposure in the first place.
Can I charge the tenant for drug-related delays or damage?
Yes. Drug-related property damage (meth contamination, grow operation damage, chemical staining) can be deducted from the security deposit and pursued as damages through court. Our documentation — timestamped photos, video, and law enforcement report numbers — becomes your evidence. For meth lab decontamination costs, which can run $5,000-$25,000+, you’ll want to consult a property management attorney about pursuing the tenant and checking your insurance coverage.
What about needles and syringes?
Empty syringes (no substance visible) are disposed of in our crew’s sharps containers — we carry these on every job. Syringes with substance still inside trigger Scenario B: stop work, isolate, contact law enforcement. If needles are scattered throughout the unit (in carpet, between cushions, in trash bags) creating a pervasive puncture risk, it becomes a biohazard situation requiring specialized sharps removal before our cleanout can proceed.

Found Drugs? We Handle the Protocol.

Law enforcement coordination. Full documentation. Zero exposure risk for you.

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