There are some jobs worse than hoarding cleanup Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon "A shotgun suicide [not pictured] is probably the worst," Spaulding said. "You've got brain matter, teeth, jaw fragments everywhere. They fly around the room like a boomerang. It's tedious cleanup, and you'll be cleaning blood off of every surface of the room."

But hoarders come in a close second Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon Spaulding made a name for herself in Orlando and Tampa with her motto, "There's no job we'll say no to." She cleans up messes like this in a hazmat suit while the hot sun beats down. The before-and-after photos of her cleanup jobs will make you want to check who lived in your home before you -- and what they did. Many states don't require landlords to report the previous renter's dirty secrets. If they had a meth lab or a sex dungeon right under your bed, you wouldn't know.

BEFORE Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon "Yeah, it always f--king reeks, even when you're wearing a suit," Spaulding said. "One time, this guy shot himself in the attic in the summer. I'm like, what the f--k! It's 140 degrees up there. That was the worst."

AFTER Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon The average cleanup job for a death [not pictured] is about $2,500, Spaulding said. Filth, hoarding and particularly messy jobs like this one can cost more.

BEFORE Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon This is a bathroom.

AFTER Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon This is the same bathroom.

BEFORE Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon This is a kitchen.

AFTER Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon This is the same kitchen, now ready to be rented out.

Bathrooms are usually the worst rooms Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon Most of the stuff you see in this photo is exactly what you think it is.

Did the landlord tell you about this before you moved in? Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon "In Florida, you can rent a house and never know you're going to get sick because it's a meth house [not pictured]," she said. "One lady bought a home and her dog licked the carpet. It got sick and died. She had to flip the home and there was nothing she could do about it."

Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon

Yes, those are maxi pads Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon

Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon

Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon

Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon

Sometimes, you have to clean up bodily fluid Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon Spaulding's job includes cleaning up after a resident dies of natural causes. This photo shows bodily fluid stuck on a mattress after a corpse decomposed. "Everybody comes to Florida to die," Spaulding said.

You never know what you'll find in a home... Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon ... So workers are always dressed in hazardous materials gear.

Laura Spaulding / Spaulding Decon