The “Insider” is small, unobtrusive, and almost invisible. It’s simple to install. You simply drill a small 1/4 inch hole, insert the plug, and inject the chemicals behind the wall and under the cabinets. The gateway closes, and keeps the chemicals from coming back into the living area. It also minimizes the odors and dangers associated with pest control services and separates the treatment from children and pets.

 

 

$19.95

This environmentally responsible system has been installed in nearly 1,000,000 structures around the world by professional pest control companies. Previously the Insider was only available to these companies, but now it is available to the general public through this new do-it-yourself kit.

Injector Plug

1) Drill and install the InsiderTM in the bottom (kick board area) of all kitchen, bath and laundry  room cabinets. Always place the InsiderTM to the far left side and far right side of the cabinets

2) Drill and install the InsiderTM into the back of the kitchen, bath and laundry room cabinets. Always place the InsiderTM to the far left and far right side of the cabinets.

3) Drill and install the InsiderTM every 6 to 8 feet around the insider perimeter of the building, just above the baseboard.

Although the InsiderTM is nearly invisible, we can usually hide them in closets or next to furniture where they are less visible. If a home has a garage, the InsiderTM can be installed through the garage wall. This will cover those interior walls from the back side.

Items included in the “Injector Pest Control System” package

  • 2 Injector Bellows “Poison injection bottles containing Niban-FG” (granular bait kills Cockroaches, Ants, Crickets, Silverfish and more.)
  • 30 Injector Plugs
  • 1 Drill Bit

This is just one of the many newspaper articles written on one of the most innovative products of the century. Please view the page about this product and others by clicking the above pictures. Thank you.

Condominiums Are Using In-Wall Pest Control

John Jackson is the inventor of The Insider. The device allows you to put chemicals in between walls where bugs live. Many condominiums are using The Insider, which is a device that allows for horizontal and vertical spraying inside the walls.

In Boca Raton, the device has been installed in thousands of condos at Hunters Run. "The device is being used in condos all over the country," said John Jackson, of Lake Worth, who invented it. "It's a self-sealing plastic insert. The chemicals are then sprayed into the walls."

Jackson came up with the idea after he saw a cockroach scuttle across his living room floor years ago. He saw it quickly disappear and found out later that bugs usually hide in walls and under cabinets. It seems logical to put the chemicals between the walls.

He designed the plastic, tub-like device and spent years getting it patented. Over 2 million “Insiders” have been sold in this and 14 other countries. It's environmentally friendly. It is more economical for the customer or condominium as very often treatments can be cut from monthly to quarterly.

It works well when the entire condo building uses The Insider. Then the bugs can't escape to untreated areas inside the walls of another unit, Jackson said.

New York NEW DAY said, "Bug infestations are  a concern  for homeowners and apartment and co-op dwellers alike." The article noted that now chemicals can be applied behind the walls where the bugs live, and away from the living area.

For more information you may call John Jackson at 561.386.5153.

The OLD Way

No more large ugly holes left in your walls after that smelly, invasive old way of pest control! The “Insider” not only minimizes smells and danger to your children and pets, but it’s easy to use, inexpensive, and allot more noninvasive!

The “Insider” Way

This is just one of the many newspaper articles written on one of the most innovative products of the century. Please view the page about this product and others by clicking the above pictures. Thank you.

USA Today
Home Pesticide Linked to Some Cancer in Kids.

  • By Anita Manning USA TODAY
  • Lawn treatments and home pest extermination are associated with an increased risk of cancer in children, says a study in the current American Journal of Public Health.

    Researchers from the University of North Carolina interviewed parents of 252 children diagnosed with cancer between 1997~83, and 222 children similar in age and other characteristics. They found:

    ~ Kids whose yards were treated with chemicals were four times as likely to be diagnosed later with soft-tissue sarcomas, malignant tumors of muscle and connective tissue. Researchers did not ask what chemicals were used, but say those “most likely to be used by people in the study area" were 2,4-D, Carbaryl and Diazinon.

    ~ Children whose homes contained pest strips faced 2½ to 3 times the risk of leukemia. The resin strips used to kill flies are treated with dichlorvos. Dennis Utterback of the Environmental Protection Agency says dichlorvos is undergoing EPA review because of concerns about the risks of cancer and neurotoxicity."

    ~ Kids whose homes had been exterminated for fleas, termites or other bugs faced a slightly elevated risk of lymph cancer. Most likely chemicals: Chlordane, Heptachlor, Diazinon and Chlorpyrifos (Dursban). Chlordane is no longer licensed by the EPA; Heptachlor is legal only for use on fire ants in electric utility boxes.

    "We found within our data that there's a strong indication that some home use of pesticides is associated with some childhood cancers," says Dr. Jack K Leiss of the State Center for Health and Environmental Statistics in Raleigh, N.C, who led the study. But, he cautions, “it's only a suggestion because of the limitations of our study. You cannot infer cause and effect at all.... further research needs to be done to elucidate that"

    Spokesmen from associations representing the chemical industry hadn't seen the report and would not comment.

    This is just one of the many newspaper articles written on one of the most innovative products of the century. Please view the page about this product and others by clicking the above pictures. Thank you.

    The Consumer

    'Insider' idea puts inventor on the road to big success

    By ERIC CONRAD

    Staff Writer for The Consumer

    LAKE WORTH - The sight of an elusive cockroach zipping behind the wall in a friend's apartment seven years ago drove John Jackson batty.
    The roach avoided the spray can Jackson's friend held, and retreated to the privacy - and relative safety - of the tiny space between the apartment building's exterior wall, and interior drywall.
    That bothered Jackson. Shouldn't there be a way to get the insecticide behind the wall? Wouldn't it be better if exterminators could effectively get their chemicals back there in the first place?
    Jackson's company, Insider Products Inc. on Lake Worth Road, now offers an answer:
    The Insider.
    The Insider is a small, hollow, plastic tube which fits the hole that a quarter-inch drill can put through drywall. An Insider is inserted through the wall, enabling commercial insecticides or those from a can (with a narrow straw, like ones that come with cans of WD-40) to get where the critters hide.
    Each Insider has plastic barbs that prevent the Insider. from falling back out of the wall, once inserted. It also has a tiny plastic seal that keeps insecticide fumes from coming back out the hole into which the chemicals are sprayed.
    Jackson, 35, of West Palm Beach, says the best part of his invention - he holds two US patents - is that the Insider is barely noticeable. Pest-control companies for years have had to punch bigger holes through drywalls and then patch them, to get at their prey.
    Since the chemicals are sprayed behind the walls, there is less of a risk to pets and small children.

    ~ John Jackson ~

     John Jackson has a new method of treating homes and businesses with pesticides, than that which exists when exterminators use topical sprays. "Pest control companies welcome this because it's the solution for a lot of the problems that they have," Jackson said.
    Jackson and business partner Fred Muller, 28, went to the National Pest Control Association convention in California last month to announce the product.
    It was a nerve-wracking time:
    Pest-control technicians could have embraced the Insider, or scoffed at it. They liked it. Since then, 10,000 Insiders have been sold. They are inexpensive. The inventor expects the plastics plant he uses in Melbourne to be churning out 16,000 Insiders a day within six weeks.
    A pest-control distributing company in Arizona already has placed a large order: Jackson and Muller are negotiating with other distributors and large pest-control firms
    .

    "It's a little overwhelming," said Muller, who handles overseas accounts for Jackson and posed as ''the bug man'' in Insider advertisements.
    Jackson hopes pest-control companies use the Insiders in two treatment packages: A limited treatment, inserting the tiny tubes only in bathroom and kitchen walls, and a broader treatment throughout the house.
    The product has generated strong interest from people who run hospitals and restaurants Muller said. They have to maintain a higher level of sanitation than homeowners, he said.
    A key to making the Insider attractive to pest-control companies was making sure the tubes fit nozzles that professionals use, or can be cheaply adapted to do so, Jackson said.
    "Do you think these companies would have paid a couple thousand dollars per technician on new equipment for something like this?" he said. "No way."
    Jackson greets his early success with glee, and a degree of brashness. He spent several years and thousands of dollars in legal bills obtaining patents, he said.
    Jackson, who used to own a small security company, spent hundreds of evening and weekend hours developing the product and pushing out paperwork that accompanies patent applications.
    "My wife and I will probably have kids, now that I know I can feed them." he said.
    "Everyone I know, my family, my friends, everyone, has put up some money to get me through this. Even my auto mechanic coughed up. They'll be rewarded. They're the ones who believed in me.

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