Baltimore Sun

Firefighte­r hurt in collapse now conscious and alert

Condition upgraded to ‘fair’ after rescue from building wreckage that killed 3 others

- By Lilly Price and Christine Condon

A Baltimore firefighte­r who was pulled from the wreckage of a burning vacant home that collapsed Monday is conscious and alert, the city fire department said Tuesday.

Emergency medical services transporte­d John McMaster to the University of Maryland Shock Trauma Center in critical condition after he and three other firefighte­rs were trapped inside a vacant row home that caught fire around 6 a.m. in the 200 block of South Stricker Street The three other firefighte­rs died.

McMaster was placed on life support in an intensive care unit. His medical condition was upgraded to “fair,” according to the fire department.

“While he has a long way to go, I am incredibly optimistic, and we will continue to pray for and support EMT/FF McMaster and his family during his time of recovery,” Baltimore Fire Chief Niles R. Ford said in a statement.

McMaster was rescued from the crumbled building almost

immediatel­y.

Firefighte­r/paramedic Kelsey Sadler and EMT/firefighte­r Kenny Lacayo, were located about an hour later and pronounced dead at Shock Trauma from cardiac arrest they suffered at the scene. Lt. Paul Butrim was pronounced dead at the scene.

Gov. Larry Hogan described the news of McMaster’s upgraded condition as “a great relief amid so much heartbreak right now.”

The incident is among the deadliest fires for Baltimore firefighte­rs in recent memory. It comes just a few months after a mother and two of her children were killed in a rowhome blaze in East Baltimore that also injured several other children.

The last on-duty death for a Baltimore firefighte­r was in 2014, when Lt. James Bethea fell into the basement of a vacant home during a firefighti­ng effort next-door and went unnoticed for hours. He died of smoke inhalation during the incident, which led to calls for reform.

Between 2006 and 2020, only about a dozen other fires in the United States claimed the lives of three or more firefighte­rs, according to data compiled by the National Fire Protection Associatio­n.

Two unions that represent Baltimore firefighte­rs and EMTs created a GoFundMe page Tuesday to raise money for the family members Sadler, Butrim and Lacayo left behind. Donations poured in. The fundraiser collected more than $40,000 in under six hours.

The firefighte­rs entered the empty rowhome adjoined to an occupied house in the city’s New Southwest/Mount Clare neighborho­od. The burning house partially collapsed while they were inside.

Butrim, known as “PJ,” was a 16-year veteran of the Baltimore City Fire Department who rose to lieutenant from his position as an apprentice. Sadler was a 15-year veteran of the department and Lacayo was a seven-year veteran.

Tuesday, the home where the fire took place — 205 S. Stricker St. — was a hollowed out shell. Its façade and most of its interior had been completely destroyed. Part of the building’s back wall remained, along with still-smoldering piles of ash and debris. Crews began using lumber to support the walls of the two homes that still stood.

As a result of the fire, that home and the two on either side of it will have to be demolished after the investigat­ion concludes, said Tammy Hawley, spokeswoma­n for the city’s Department of Housing and Community Developmen­t. One of those homes — 203 S. Stricker — also was vacant, Hawley said. The other was occupied, although no one was home at the time of the fire, said fire department spokeswoma­n Blair Adams.

Monday evening, Ford said firefighte­rs chose to enter the home partly because one of the adjacent properties was occupied.

“They made the determinat­ion they could control the fire and put it out,” he said. “It’s up to those individual­s on the scene to see the circumstan­ces they have, and they did.”

The home at 205 S. Stricker St. had last ‘been inspected by city officials Jan. 4, Hawley said. The routine checkup, which

The home at 205 S. Stricker St. had last been inspected by city officials Jan. 4, Hawley said. The building, vacant since 2010, had been condemned in 2015 after another fire, which injured three firefighte­rs.

wasn’t precipitat­ed by a citizen’s 311 call, found that the building was adequately boarded up and cleaned. The building, vacant since 2010, had been condemned in 2015 after another fire, which injured three firefighte­rs.

Efforts to reach the home’s owners were unsuccessf­ul Tuesday.

The Mount Clare neighborho­od where the home sits has the sixth most vacant buildings per acre of any neighborho­od in the city, according to a Baltimore Sun analysis of city data.

Tuesday, flags flew at half-staff at nearby Engine Company 14, which sits just across

Hollins Street from a row of vacant, boarded-up homes.

The problem has become endemic to the city, with more than 15,000 vacant homes — the majority of them privately owned. The city uses citations, criminal penalties and tax sale foreclosur­es to address issues with the properties, Hawley said.

The destroyed home on Stricker had liens against it and had been offered up in previous tax sales, but there was no market for the property, Hawley said.

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 ?? KARL MERTON FERRON/ BALTIMORE SUN ?? Caution tape remains at the scene of a fire that claimed the lives of three Baltimore firefighte­rs Monday and left one hospitaliz­ed.
KARL MERTON FERRON/ BALTIMORE SUN Caution tape remains at the scene of a fire that claimed the lives of three Baltimore firefighte­rs Monday and left one hospitaliz­ed.
 ?? ?? Lt. Paul Butrim, Truck 23; from left; firefighte­r Kenny Lacayo, Engine 14; and firefighte­r Kelsey Sadler, Engine 14, were killed in the building collapse.
Lt. Paul Butrim, Truck 23; from left; firefighte­r Kenny Lacayo, Engine 14; and firefighte­r Kelsey Sadler, Engine 14, were killed in the building collapse.
 ?? KARL MERTON FERRON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Engine Company 14’s quarters Tuesday, following the loss of their comrades in a fire on Stricker Street blocks away.
KARL MERTON FERRON/BALTIMORE SUN Engine Company 14’s quarters Tuesday, following the loss of their comrades in a fire on Stricker Street blocks away.

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