Oakland fire: 33 bodies found; 70% of building still to be searched
Oakland fire: 33 bodies found; 70% of building still to be searched
Posted by John P. Bradford // December 5, 2016
Oakland, California (CNN)At least 33 people have been confirmed dead, including teenagers and a deputy’s son, in a massive blaze that gutted a converted warehouse over the weekend during an electronic dance party.
The death toll is expected to rise as crews search the wreckage of the two-story building, which burst into flames late Friday night. Roughly 30% of the building had been searched as of Sunday afternoon, Alameda County Sheriff’s Sgt. Ray Kelly said in a news conference Sunday.
It could take weeks to identify victims through DNA and dental records, he said. Officials have asked victims’ families to preserve potential DNA samples from such items as their loved ones’ hairbrushes and toothbrushes to assist in identifications. He added that officials were also working with the transgender community to identify some of the victims.
“The scope of this tragedy is tremendous,” Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf said Sunday.
A criminal investigation team is on the scene as a preliminary measure, Schaaf said.
The recovery search would be long and arduous as firefighters work to remove debris “literally bucket by bucket in a methodical, thoughtful, mindful and compassionate way,” Oakland battalion Fire Chief Melinda Drayton said.
“We had firefighters with basically coveralls and buckets and shovels taking bits of debris out into the vacant lot to be loaded into dump trucks and removed to an off-site location,” she said.
Drayton, who has been with the department for 19 years, called it one of the most deadly fires in the city’s history. A fire in Oakland Hills in 1991 killed 25 people.
Even after firefighters put out the blaze Saturday, the building was deemed too unsafe for emergency responders to enter. Officials say the roof collapsed onto the second floor and then parts of that collapsed on to the first floor.
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“It’s too unsafe,” Oakland Fire Chief Teresa Deloach Reed told CNN affiliate KRON-TV in San Francisco. “And not only that, there’s a lot of heavy wood from when the roof caved in that’s going to have to be removed.”
A former California state chief fire marshal said firefighters have to move slowly and cautiously for several reasons.
“One is falling debris,” James McMullen told CNN Sunday. “One is building collapse. One is the fact that you don’t want to disturb evidence that’s critical for the fire investigation. … So the key thing is, you’ve got to move slowly and you’ve got to preserve the scene at the same time so that the fire investigators can in fact determine the area of origin and subsequently the point of origin (of the fire), and then determine the cause.”
Freelance journalist Sam Lefebvre said many people were just arriving at the warehouse when the fire started, because the dance party was supposed to go very late. The warehouse is a “sort of live/work art space with a lot of old decorations and furniture,” Lefebvre told CNN. An electronic music DJ known as Golden Donna was scheduled to perform.
By the time John Evanofski arrived at 31st Avenue, giant flames lit up the night sky amid the billows of black smoke.
“You could feel the heat of the flames,” he said. “Most of us were crying or unable to react. It was so hot and so terrible knowing that so many of us were still inside.”
A Facebook page created for the event became a forum for friends and family of the victims, who posted frantic messages seeking information about loved ones. Those who survived shared their names to show they were safe.
Last month the warehouse’s owners had received notification of city code violations for hazardous trash and debris, property records show. Officials had not yet completed an investigation into a November complaint about an illegal interior building structure.
CNN has reached out to the property owners for comment.
Coping with a nightmare
More than 40 people gathered Saturday at the Chapel of the Chimes in Oakland for a vigil for victims. Organizers asked attendees to light a candle at the end of the service, saying flames caused pain and destruction “but tonight we light the flame for good and for peace.”
Now as loved ones seek answers, photographer Mul must wrestle with the reality of losing a friend and grapple with his memories of the horrific night.
“I tried to save my friend but I had to leave him,” Mul said.