Fire kills 7 kids at Brooklyn home
Fire kills 7 children at home in New York
Story highlights
- "This is an unbelievable tragedy," New York's Mayor says
- Malfunctioning "hot plate" apparently started the fire, according to the fire commissioner
(CNN)[Breaking news update, published at 1:07 p.m. ET]
"This
is an unbelievable tragedy," New York Mayor Bill de Blasio told
reporters Saturday about a fire that killed seven children and seriously
injured their mother and the children's teenage sister in Brooklyn.
"It's
so painful, it's so difficult . ... Every New Yorker is feeling this
pain right now," de Blasio said after touring the site with fire
officials early Saturday afternoon.
New
York fire Commissioner Daniel Nigro said that, from what he can tell,
the fire would have made it "impossible" for the mother to have left her
second-floor room to collect her children in other rooms on the floor,
Nigro said.
"The mother would have had
to go into the fire" to collect the children, Nigro said. Instead, she
did what she could to jump out of a window to get help.
[Original story, published at 9:07 a.m. ET]
A
"hot plate" keeping food warm in a kitchen overnight apparently started
a fire that killed seven children in two-story house in Brooklyn early
Saturday, New York City's fire commissioner said.
The
four boys and three girls, siblings ranging in age from 5 to 15, were
in upstairs bedrooms when the fire swept up from the first floor shortly
after midnight in Brooklyn's south-central Midwood section, New York
Fire Commissioner Daniel Nigro said.
The
children's 45-year-old mother and one of her daughters -- a
14-year-old, police say -- also were upstairs but jumped out of windows
to escape; they were in critical condition at a hospital, being treated
for burns and smoke inhalation, Nigro said.
"This
is the largest tragedy by fire that this city has had in seven years,"
Nigro said. "It's a tragedy for this family. ... It's a tragedy for our
city."
The children's father apparently was away for a conference, and authorities were having trouble contacting him, Nigro said.
The
family apparently had been trying to keep food warm with a "hot plate"
device, and an unspecified malfunction happened, Nigro said.
Nigro was asked why food was being warmed overnight.
"I believe it's the Sabbath, and people keep food warm that way. They don't have to operate a stove," Nigro answered.
More
than 100 firefighters went to the house in the snowy neighborhood,
located about three blocks south of Brooklyn College, after the fire was
reported at 12:23 a.m., CNN affiliate NY1 reported.
Pre-dawn
video from CNN affiliate WABC showed firefighters throwing debris
outside from second-floor windows, where smoke still drifted out.
Smoke detector in basement, but none found above
Firefighters
found no evidence of smoke detectors in the first and second floors,
according to Nigro. There was a smoke detector in the basement, but
Nigro didn't say whether it had activated.
The mom and her eight children were in at least five upstairs bedrooms when the fire started in the kitchen below, Nigro said.
A
reporter asked why the mother and one of her daughters were able to
escape, while seven of her other children did not. He noted, to start
with, that the mom and the teenage daughter were among the oldest in the
house.
But their location -- toward
the front of the house -- also might have helped. The fire department
said the fire was largely in the rear.
"(The survivors) were toward the front of the home, and the younger children were toward the back," Nigro said.
Firefighters
arrived to find the mom and the 14-year-old already out of the house.
After extinguishing the flames on the first floor, they rushed upstairs
to find the seven remaining children in bedrooms.
"To
find a house full of children that can't be revived, I'm sure this will
take its toll on our members for quite some time," Nigro said.
One
girl, 8, was pronounced dead at the scene. Six of her brothers and
sisters -- girls who were 12 and 15, plus boys who 5, 6, 7, and 11 --
were sent to hospitals but died, police said.
Authorities didn't immediately release their names, saying relatives still needed to be told of their deaths.
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