Blast, blaze gut apartments; 2 die

Boom rocks Maryland complex in night; 34 hurt, 90 homeless

A emergency worker investigates Thursday inside the remains of an apartment complex that was destroyed by an explosion and fire late Wednesday. The blast was heard more than a mile away, officials said.
A emergency worker investigates Thursday inside the remains of an apartment complex that was destroyed by an explosion and fire late Wednesday. The blast was heard more than a mile away, officials said.

Two people died and 34 were injured when an explosion and fire leveled a Silver Spring, Md., apartment complex, forcing residents to toss children from upper floors and flee collapsing buildings, fire officials said Thursday.

photo

AP

Two people died and dozens were injured late Wednesday when an explosion and fire destroyed this apartment complex in Silver Spring, Md. Some tenants tossed children from upper floors as they fled collapsing units, fire officials said Thursday. Reports of a gas leak were investigated in late July, but it was unclear whether the leak was related to the explosion and fire.

Authorities said at lunchtime news conference that they were still working to identify the dead and uncover the cause of the overnight blast and fire, which tore through the Flower Branch Apartments and displaced more than 90 residents.

"Firefighters were met with heavy fire conditions and multiple rescues to be made," said David Steckel, division chief of the Montgomery County Fire Department, at the news conference.

Firefighters continued to search for "some" missing residents of the Piney Branch Road apartments on Thursday afternoon, but backed off figures released earlier that the whereabouts were unknown for five to seven people.

Montgomery County executive Isiah Leggett said, "Our heart goes out to those affected."

Leggett said at the news conference that officials had received a call July 25 about the smell of gas at the complex, but it remained unclear whether a leak played a role in the blast and fire.

Tim Firestine, the county's chief administrative officer, said the county received a call at 10:16 p.m. July 25 about a smell of gas at 8701 Arliss St. and fire and rescue personnel responded at 10:20 p.m. They cleared the scene at 10:32 p.m., Firestine said, and the county is still trying to determine who responded, what tests, if any, were conducted and why the scene was cleared.

On Wednesday, a resounding blast occurred shortly before midnight that could be heard more than a mile away and shook the affected buildings, 8701 and 8703 Arliss St., like an earthquake, some residents said. An off-duty police officer was the first to report the blast at 11:52 or 11:54 p.m., officials said.

The explosion sent a door across the street, left clothes in trees and shoes strewn across a road. The two buildings resembled the site of a bomb blast with a gaping hole left in them. The flames that followed created a desperate scene.

"People were dropping children and jumping out of other windows," Montgomery County Fire Chief Scott Goldstein said of the fire at an early morning briefing Thursday. "Everybody was getting out of the building as rapidly as possible."

Goldstein said a K-9 team searching the rubble of the apartment complex had a "hit." He said it could indicate someone is trapped in the debris. It was unclear whether that hit turned out to be one of the people confirmed dead.

Clara Mazunder, 39, said she awoke to a loud "boom," looked out her bedroom window and saw flames. She yelled for her two sons, ages 18 and 10, to get out of the apartment.

As she was running out of the building, she said she frantically pounded on her neighbors' doors yelling, "Fuego, fuego," the Spanish word for fire.

On Thursday morning, she stood outside a temporary shelter at a recreation center with all she had left: a wool jacket, her nightgown, pink flip-flops and her large white purse.

"It was so scary," Mazunder said. "But I am grateful."

Montgomery County Fire Battalion chief Dorcus Howard Richards said several of those injured were transported to hospitals. The residents' injuries ranged from minor to serious, Goldstein said. Some had respiratory injuries from smoke, and others had burns and fractures from jumping out of windows. The firefighters' injuries weren't life-threatening.

By 7 a.m., Holy Cross Hospital in Silver Spring said 11 patients had been treated for minor injuries and released. Medstar Washington Hospital Center said five patients were treated there, but officials declined to release their conditions. Some already had left the hospital.

Washington Adventist Hospital in Takoma Park, Md., said it had received nine patients and several had been treated and released as of 10:30 a.m. One was transferred and one was admitted for observation as a precaution. The hospital declined to release the conditions of the patients still in its care.

By Thursday morning, some firefighters lay in the road next to the apartment building, exhausted from their efforts.

"It's going to be a long, extended investigation to figure out what caused this fire," firefighter Howard Richards said.

Willie Morales, a resident of the apartment complex, was walking across Piney Branch Road from a chicken restaurant when he collapsed to the ground on his stomach in fear from the loudest explosion he ever heard.

"It was one big boom, like nothing I'd ever heard," Morales said. When he decided it was safe to rise to his feet, he saw flames pouring from the basement and first floor of the apartment building in front of him.

Morales said he tried to bang on windows and to tell people to get out. He said he was screaming: "Fire! Fire! You have to get out!" in English and Spanish. "I tried to knock on the door and windows," he said. "I've never seen a fire like this in my life."

Information for this article was contributed by Keith L. Alexander, Bill Turque, Luz Lazo, Fenit Nirrapil and LaVendrick Smith of The Washington Post.

A Section on 08/12/2016

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