The Corkman

Alcohol and chip pan were factors in Macroom fire deaths

MACROOM MEN PRAISED FOR THEIR BRAVERY IN TRYING TO SAVE PAIR WHO DIED, AND SURVIVOR, BY INQUEST CORONER

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TWO young Macroom men were this week praised for their bravery by a coroner after he heard how they made heroic efforts to rescue two men who perished when a blaze broke at a house in the town over last year’s May Bank Holiday weekend when a chip pan caught fire.

Ryan Manning from Sleaveen in Macroom and Tim Coleman from St Colman’s Park in the town had made “heroic efforts” to try and save Kenny Relihan (26) and Noel O’Mahony (64) when fire broke out at Mr Relihan’s home in St Colman’s Park, said Coroner for South Cork, Frank O’Connell.

Mr O’Connell had heard how Mr Manning raised the alarm when he was visiting Mr Coleman’s, directly opposite the burning house, at around 4am on the morning of May 2 last and together they had managed to kick in the front door to try and rescue the occupants.

“Tim and myself were kicking down the door – we got it down after a minute or so – I could hear Kenny Relihan – I couldn’t see him with the thick smoke but I could hear him about six or seven feet away – he sounded disoriente­d and in pain,” said Mr Manning.

He told how he tried to advance further into the smoke filled hallway of the semi-detached house but was forced back by the smoke and the intense heat and he later dropped to his knees at the front door to try and see Mr Relihan under the smoke but he couldn’t see him.

Mr Coleman told how he had tried to get up the stairs but was met by a wall of “intense heat and smoke” and managed to get to only the second step on the stairs before he was forced to retreat. “I was choking from the smoke, and the heat was overwhelmi­ng,” he said.

Mr Coleman, who was later treated in hospital for smoke inhalation and laceration­s, told how he then assisted his mother’s partner, Alan Doyle, in putting a ladder up to the upstairs room and he went up where he persuaded Mr Relihan’s mother, Noreen McAuliffe, to jump from the window sill.

Ms McAuliffe landed in the garden and neighbours came to her assistance before she was taken to hospital for treatment but Mr Coleman was unable to get to Mr O’Mahony, who had appeared briefly at the upstairs window but then was lost in the smoke.

Ms McAuliffe told in a statement how she was asleep upstairs when she was awoken by Mr O’Mahony to find the room filled with black smoke. “Noel pushed and threw me out the window. I shouted at him to follow me out. He saved my life, God be good to him,” she said.

In her statement read to the court by Insp Brian Murphy, Ms McAuliffe said she kept a saucepan with oil on the cooker downstairs and that Mr Relihan liked to cook up a meal when he got home after a night out as there was no late night take-away in Macroom.

Neighbour Kelly O’Driscoll said Ms McAuliffe had told her once that Mr Relihan had nearly burned the house down cooking late at night while on another occasion Ms McAuliffe had told her that she came down in the morning to find the oven left on and Mr Relihan asleep.

Another neighbour, Tyrone Murphy, told how he had come home around 3am on the morning in question from babysittin­g and spent some time looking for a phone charger before going to bed only to hear a faint high pitch beeping and he went around their house to try and locate the noise.

He then realised the noise, which he later discovered was a fire alarm, was coming from Ms McAuliffe’s semi-detached house next door and he heard a commotion and when he opened the window to look out, “a big gush of smoke” passed in front of his window.

He woke his parents and his brother, and they went downstairs and out on to the street to assist where he saw Mr Manning and Mr Coleman trying to kick in the door and he later helped to try and break Ms McAulliffe’s fall when she jumped from the upstairs window.

“I tried to lift her to her feet and I went and got her a chair from our kitchen – she kept saying ‘Noel and Kenny, where are they, where are they?’ I told her they were coming,” said Mr Murphy who stayed with Ms McAuliffe until she was taken by ambulance to Cork University Hospital.

Witness Andrew Hegarty told how he had met Mr Relihan at around 1.30am after he had been thrown out of O’Riada’s Nightclub. “He was merry,” said Mr Hegarty, adding he later met him again at 2.30am as he was walking home and he tried to talk to him but Mr Relihan kept his head down.

The inquest had earlier heard evidence from Commander Kevin Kingston of Macroom Fire Brigade who told how the brigade responded to an emergency call at 3.55am that two people were trapped in a house fire at a two storey terraced house in St Colman’s Park.

They arrived at the house at 4.03am to discover the fire well under way with heavy thick smoke throughout the building. They battled to bring it under control and when it was safe to do so, two teams entered the building using breathing apparatus.

One team found Mr O’Mahony between the bed and the window in an upstairs bedroom while a second team recovered Mr Relihan from the downstairs hall area between the kitchen and the sitting room. Both were removed and pronounced dead at the scene by Dr Peter Cronin.

Garda technical expert, Garda Keelin O’Keeffe said she carried out a forensic examinatio­n of the scene and was satisfied the fire started accidental­ly in the kitchen where it appeared a chip pan on an electric cooker caught fire with most extensive damage being directly over the cooker.

Assistant State Pathologis­t Dr Margaret Bolster found Mr Relihan had died from carbon monoxide poisoning due to smoke inhalation in associatio­n with burns, and Mr O’Mahony had died from carbon monoxide due to smoke inhalation in associatio­n with an enlarged heart and coronary artery disease

Coroner, Mr O’Connell said he was satisfied from all the evidence that the fire started after Mr Relihan came home from a night club and put on a chip pan only to fall asleep, and the house to catch fire resulting in his own death and that of Mr O’Mahony, who was staying over for the night.

He noted that Mr Relihan was found to have an alcohol concentrat­ion of 213mgs per 100mls of blood and Mr O’Mahony had an alcohol concentrat­ion of 247mgs per 100mls which was a factor not just in the fire starting but also in impairing their ability to escape from the burning house.

“Alcohol had a big role in both deaths but the old fashioned chip pan – the type you put on top of a cooker – was also a factor, and has been the cause of so many house fires and deaths that they should be banned,” said Mr O’Connell as he returned verdicts of accidental death in both cases

Mr O’Connell said he intended to write to the Director of Consumer Affairs seeking to have such old style open chip pans withdrawn and he advised anyone with one to dump it in the bin and go and buy an electrical fryer with a thermostat that cuts out before the oil catches fire and is much safer.

He said that he had come across at least three cases of people losing their lives in house fires started by chip pans catching fire in South Cork alone in the past five years while he was aware of another case in Cork city where another person lost their life after a chip pan caught fire.

 ??  ?? The house in St Coleman’s Park, Macroom, where the two men died in the fire last May.
The house in St Coleman’s Park, Macroom, where the two men died in the fire last May.
 ??  ?? Noreen McAuliffe, the only survivor of a house fire in Macroom, holding a picture of her son, Kenneth Relihan who perished in the fire along with a family friend, Noel O’Mahony.
Noreen McAuliffe, the only survivor of a house fire in Macroom, holding a picture of her son, Kenneth Relihan who perished in the fire along with a family friend, Noel O’Mahony.

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