Saturday, October 26, 2013

Fatal Bronx Blaze Was Caused by Candles


Three brothers, Elijah Artis, 5, Jeremiah Artis, 2, and Michael Turner, 4 months, were killed in the blaze, according to the police. Two other siblings — a 4-year old and a 4-month old, Michael’s twin — and the children’s mother, 25, were treated for smoke inhalation, the police added.


The two surviving children, both girls, were listed in stable condition on Saturday at Lincoln Medical and Mental Health Center, Nydia Negron, a hospital spokeswoman, said. The children’s mother, who was not immediately identified, was treated and released.


Six other people were injured but did not seek treatment at the hospital, the Fire Department said.


The fire erupted inside the family’s apartment on the third floor at 64 West 165th Street just before 8 p.m. on Friday. A Fire Department spokesman said candles placed in the kitchen caused the blaze.


Allan Drury, a spokesman for Consolidated Edison, said power to the apartment had been cut off on Thursday over delinquent payments. Neighbors said the family had been using candles for light.


Mr. Drury added that Con Edison typically tries to avoid turning off power, instead putting customers on payment plans. This particular family, it seemed, fell too far behind.


“There was significant amount of arrears on the account — well into the thousands of dollars,” Mr. Drury said.


At the apartment building on Saturday, workers boarded up windows and vacuumed shattered glass. A Red Cross volunteer said 19 residents had been moved to emergency housing.


Outside the six-story building, neighbors had erected a small memorial with a brown teddy bear and candles.


Valerie Frazier, 47, a tenant who returned with her husband to gather some belongings on Saturday, said the conditions inside were “gruesome.”


“It just looked like a horror movie,” she said.


Ms. Frazier and others said the mother doted on her children.


“She made sure they laughed, they played,” Ms. Frazier said. “She did everything a mother should do. But it must have got overwhelming.”


A man who neighbors said was the father of the children arrived on Friday evening as rescue operations were under way. After learning that his family was inside, he tried to run into the building but was blocked by police officers, Ms. Frazier said.


The man’s brother, Omar Artis, identified him as Tyrone Artis, 40, and said he was the father of all five children in the home. Mr. Artis said his brother and the children’s mother had a sixth child who was staying with the woman’s mother.


Neighbors said they were alerted to the blaze by the mother’s screams as she stood on the fire escape cradling one of the children. Two men pulled down the fire-escape ladder, neighbors said, and helped the woman and child down. Another person helped rescue a second child, but the flames and smoke grew too intense for anyone to attempt to save the remaining children, witnesses said.


The children were all in the living room at the time of the fire, and were possibly asleep, Deputy Assistant Chief Jack Mooney said at a Saturday evening news conference outside the apartment building. He said that the first firefighters arrived on the scene 3 minutes and 36 seconds after the call came in.


But even that was too late.


Chief Mooney and other officials said that there did not appear to be any smoke detectors in the apartment.


Charlotte Amakye, 38, who lives across the street from the building, rushed outside and helped one of the girls, who she said was “full of smoke.”


Ms. Amakye brought the girl, who was covered in soot, to a bodega on the ground floor and wiped her face with a paper towel. “Then she coughed and I knew she was alive,” she said.





Yahoo Local News – New York Times




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