
Richard Handl, was arrested by the Swedish police for the possession of nuclear material including radium, americium, and uranium. The inquisitive man was creating a nuclear reactor to see if it's possible to split atoms at home." Crazy, but true.
Handl isn't the first man to be arrested with the early workings of a homemade nuclear reactor on his property. Back in 1994, 17-year-old David Hahn, aka the "Radioactive Boy Scout", tried to create a functioning reactor in a backyard shed at his house in Michigan.
Hahn collected reactor components from everyday household items including americium from smoke detectors and radium from clocks. He even duped professors and adult scientists into thinking he was their colleague instead of a high-school student.
His reaction chamber was a large bored-out piece of lead where he conducted his experiments. The reaction never reached critical mass but it did produce dangerous levels of radiation. His radioactive backyard lab was discovered after a chance encounter with police. The shed and surrounding property was declared a Superfund site and cost $60,000 to clean up.

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