to check enrique s story that he was alone when he drove out of the garage early that saturday morning. so you you know what we re working on, right? what we re trying to is a and you re being very helpful with yeah. is being able to figure out, you know, the last place she s seen. because that way we can focus our efforts right. searching in this area. though his memory seemed fuzzy, enrique had been cooperative, speaking with detectives down at headquarters without an attorney. and police found no trace of christina inside his car. but since enrique was the last person seen with christina, police kept digging, even digging through the trash outside of enrique s home. what d they get out of that? they saw several cleaning bottles that were empty, odor removing chemicals, bottles of that were empty. which could ve been used by him on his car or somebody in the house. yeah. they re normal household cleaners, but the timing might be a bit suspicious. the
- [announcer] do you have an invention idea but don t know what to do next? a literal ton. call invent help today. they can help you get started with your idea. call now 800-710-0020. right now you may be breathing toxic fumes in your home or workplace. a new study found an alarming amount of dangerous chemicals escape from everyday products, and we re talking about things like shampoo, lotion, household cleaners, deowederizers, soap. some of these things have been linked to cancer. this is one of these things where it s stress inducing to think it s floating around out there. explain the risks to us. jessica, you are right.
it s stress-inducing. this study looks at chemicals like formaldehyde, and meth lean chloride. household cleaners, shampoos, body motions can contain this, and cancer, birth defects, and hormonal issues, and because we see exposures to a lot of the chemicals this study puts a number on it, 5,000 tons number, and that s what is eye-opening here, jessica. can we do anything to make this better or to protect ourselves? it almost feels hopeless. is there something we can do? right. well, in california they have prop 65, which we know requires businesses to warn consumers