Montecito Fire Chiefs Meet With DETOXSCAN &
F.A.C.E.S. Leadership to Discuss the Advancement of Toxin Awareness, Detox
Protocols & Diagnostic Innovations for Firefighters
Facilitated by
integrative physician Dr. Leslie Valle Montoya—a clinical
partner to DETOXSCAN and F.A.C.E.S. currently supporting firefighters
responding to the
A Shared Priority:
Occupational
Exposure Is No Longer Optional - It’s a Crisis
From the outset, both agencies aligned on one reality: firefighters are exposed to an unprecedented and escalating mix of carcinogens, neurotoxins, combustion by-products, plastics, PFAS, VOCs, and heavy metals. Exposure is inevitable—but the long-term consequences don’t have to be.
Chief Neels emphasized that Montecito firefighters returning from recent wildfires—especially the Eaton and Palisades Fires—were already reporting concerns that triggered statewide attention and motivated early testing. Yet when well intended groups attempted to perform on-site blood draws at fire camps without adequate vetting, Chief Neels halted the effort for his personnel.
“It’s really tough for me… to support someone I don’t know drawing bloods at a fire camp that we have not vetted at all,” he explained. “We were not supportive. We needed to step back, bring our firefighters home, and do this properly.” That caution marked a turning point: the department sought credible partners, validated methods and quantifiable testing—three pillars that DETOXSCAN and F.A.C.E.S. were built for.
Introducing Metal Scanning
Innovation: OligoScan Toxin Mapping & POCUS
During the meeting, Goetze and Dr. Robert L. Bard (a brief guest participant) demonstrated the value of non-invasive toxin detection, including the OligoScan—a clinical spectrometer that scans tissue for heavy metals and elements in minutes.
Dr. Bard shared his own verified mercury results and explained how the device can:
· detect metals such as mercury, lead, arsenic, and thallium,
· quantify tissue levels rather than temporary blood or urine snapshots,
· provide data within minutes without needles or lab shipping delays,
·
serve as a rapid screening tool
after fire incidents.
“This is the Star Trek future,” Goetze said, noting that modern POCUS can be used in rigs, med units, and firehouses for quick assessment and triage—without invasive procedures.
Montecito’s Key Question: “How Do
We Get Toxins Out of Our Firefighters?”
Battalion Chief Shaun Davis—head of the department’s Safety Committee—cut to
the central dilemma:“We know what’s in us. We know exposure is inevitable. But what do we do about it? What actually gets it out of us?” This question marks a national gap many fire departments face. Prevention and PPE improvements help, but they cannot remove absorbed toxins already accumulating in organs, tissues, and endocrine systems.
1. Prevention – minimizing exposure via PPE practices and decontamination.
2. Post-incident Decon – showers, gear isolation, and cleaning protocols.
3.
Post-exposure Treatment –
the missing puzzle piece: effective detox methods that work.
This is where DETOXSCAN and its
encyclopedic toxicology database offered what
· known environmental and occupational toxins,
· scientifically supported detox modalities,
· clinical technologies,
· global protocols including niacin-induced detoxification, sauna-based programs, and integrative methods.
Root explained how DETOXSCAN’s evidence-driven framework aligns with F.A.C.E.S.’ core mission: prevention, early detection, and real-world recovery solutions for firefighters.
The Evidence Firefighters Need:
Real Detoxification in Action
To answer Davis’s question about
what actually removes toxins, Root presented dramatic evidence from the Root
Method detox program: A New York narcotics officer who had conducted over 200
meth-lab raids sweated out visible chemical compounds during
sauna-based detox sessions—enough to discolor towels in vibrant patterns
confirmed as residues such as sodium hydroxide (Drāno). “These are the kinds of
toxins inside the body that can come out,” Root explained.
Firefighters in wildfire regions, meth-lab response, hazmat incidents, and structure fires experience similar exposures, making such detox outcomes directly relevant. Although Montecito firefighters are currently undergoing a Level 1 detox program at Dr. Montoya’s clinic, Root noted the availability of a Level 3 full 30-day detox protocol—a complete mobilization-and-elimination methodology used for decades in occupational medicine.
Building A Local Framework: Montecito Fire
Positions Itself as a First-Mover
Chief Neels emphasized the advantage of being a Fire District—which grants him greater administrative flexibility and the authority to implement innovative programs quickly. “We can pivot and we can make things happen here,” he affirmed.
The department’s next steps, as outlined by Neels and Davis, include:
· reviewing feedback from the six firefighters currently participating in Dr. Montoya’s program,
· evaluating the potential integration of OligoScan and POCUS,
· expanding education on exposure risks and detox solutions,
· coordinating with the department’s medical director and national experts like Dr. Jeff Burgess (Firefighter Cancer Cohort Study).
Neels also requested further information, reports, and case studies on
OligoScan accuracy and adoption in
A Collaborative Future: Firefighters Deserve
Options—And Proof
The meeting concluded with a shared
commitment to collaboration, transparency, and scientific rigor. Goetze
emphasized that every article, newsletter segment, and educational publish will
be fully approved by the department before release. “We just want to save
lives—just like you do,” he said. “Whatever you need, we are here.”
Chief Neels reciprocated, noting the value of having partners who can bring
credible, vetted solutions to the table.
This meeting represents a landmark step in redefining firefighter health protection for the next generation.
SUPPLEMENTAL NEWS:
The Next Battle in Occupational Exposure: Detecting and Mitigating Heavy Metals
By: Dr. Robert L. Bard
I have spent years scanning for cancer—breast, thyroid, prostate, liver, lymphatic disease—and for inflammatory conditions that often precede malignancy. In that process, I have met hundreds of first responders who did everything right on the job, yet were never warned about the long-term biological cost of service. What has become increasingly clear to me—especially over the past year—is that heavy metal toxicity is the next sensible, unavoidable frontier in occupational medicine.
Through the growth and application of DetoxScan.org, we have been able to evaluate individuals who appear “clinically normal” on the surface, yet demonstrate alarming internal burdens of mercury, lead, cadmium, arsenic, aluminum, and other metals. These findings are not isolated. They are patterned. And they correlate strongly with occupational exposure narratives I hear every day.
From Camp Lejeune veterans exposed to contaminated water, to burn-pit exposure in Iraq and Afghanistan, to Vietnam-era Agent Orange, to firefighters working plastics-heavy modern fires and Ground Zero responders from 9/11—one recurring pathogenic thread emerges: metals that accumulate silently and persist for decades.
Heavy metals are not benign. They are neurotoxins, endocrine disruptors, mitochondrial poisons, and immune modulators. Clinically, they are associated with chronic fatigue, cognitive decline, tremors, neuropathy, thyroid dysfunction, cardiovascular disease, autoimmune disorders, infertility, mood disturbances, and increased cancer susceptibility. These are not abstract theories—they are findings we see repeatedly when exposure history is paired with modern screening.
What has changed—and what gives me great optimism—is access to non-invasive screening technologies, including spectrophotometry and light-based tissue analysis. These tools allow us to assess metal burden safely, rapidly, and without radiation or invasive sampling. When paired with diagnostic imaging, laboratory studies, and clinical history, they expand our investigative lens dramatically.
Early cancer detection saved countless lives. I believe early toxic burden detection will do the same. If we truly want to protect those who protect us, this is the battle we must now fight—with vigilance, intelligence, and better tools than ever before.











