Small Town News

Crime

Investigators probe San Bruno blast

Independent Coast Observer of Gualala, California

- Advertisement -

SAN BRUNO, California (AP) -- It took almost a half-hour to determine that the massive fireball consuming a San Francisco suburb wasn't a plane crash.

First-responders rushing against the fleeing crowds initially believed a jetliner from nearby San Francisco International Airport had gone down in the San Bruno neighborhood or that terrorists had struck -- or both. "I was concerned about a secondary explosion. I didn't know what we had,"

San Bruno Fire Capt. Bill Forester recalled Tuesday.

"I breathed a sigh of relief when I saw it was not an airplane -- there would have been more victims."

What turned out to be a gas line rupture last Thursday fueled a roaring blaze so intense that it cracked windshields of the closest fire engines and sent four firefighters to the hospital for smoke inhalation. The blast also broke a water main, leaving all hydrants in the area dry. "It was a sinking feeling," Forester said. "We needed massive water for this thing -- and we discovered there was no water." While residents helped crews drag hoses from nearly 4,000 feet (1,220 meters) away to supply water, other first-responders, including South San Francisco police Lt. Ron Carlino, pushed into smoke-filled homes to check for survivors.

Searing heat prevented them from getting too close to the heart of the fire. "We were left helpless," Carlino said. "The wall of fire was incredibly, intensely hot. We were helpless knowing there were people we couldn't get to."

Many of the 400 police officers and firefighters who responded to the explosion, which claimed at least four fives and destroyed nearly 40 homes, acted despite the dangers: Some were fighting for a neighborhood they grew up in, the homes of friends and streets where children played. "I saw smoke and flames, and I knew I had to go," said South San Francisco police Detective Ken Chetcuti, who grew up in the area.

"I was thinking to myself that I knew a lot of people in that neighborhood."

Authorities said Tuesday that three people remained missing, all of whom lived at the same address.

About 10 investigators were working to locate them, said San Bruno police Chief Neil Talford. "It's forensic work with the coroner's office to identify any remains, as well as locating any individuals who may still be out there," he said.

The San Mateo County coroner identified Elizabeth Torres, 81, who lived just yards from the source of the explosion, as one of the people killed.

Her two daughters and son-in-law were seriously injured and remained hospitalized with burn injuries, according to the woman's grandson, Frank Torres. Also killed were Jessica Morales, 20, Jacqueline Greig, 44, and her daughter, Janessa, 13. Meanwhile, federal investigators said they wrapped up their on-site probe and had moved on to interviewing witnesses of the blast. Investigators still don't know what caused the Pacific Gas & Electric Co. gas transmission line to rupture and blow a section of 30-inch pipe out of the ground.

Officials could not say how long it will take the agency to release the test results, which could show if corrosion or some other factor caused the rupture. Investigators were also constructing a timeline of the incident and were looking into why it took PG&E crews nearly two hours to shut off the gas, allowing it to fuel the flames. The company has said it took time to manually turn the valves for the pipes.



Copyright 2010 Independent Coast Observer, Gualala, California. All Rights Reserved. This content, including derivations, may not be stored or distributed in any manner, disseminated, published, broadcast, rewritten or reproduced without express, written consent from SmallTownPapers, Inc.

© 2011 Independent Coast Observer Gualala, California. All Rights Reserved. This content, including derivations, may not be stored or distributed in any manner, disseminated, published, broadcast, rewritten or reproduced without express, written consent from DAS.

Original Publication Date: September 17, 2010



More from Independent Coast Observer