China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Death toll above 30 in Oakland fire

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A fire that devastated an Oakland, California loft building during a weekend dance party has taken at least 33 lives and the toll will likely rise, authoritie­s said on Sunday, as criminal investigat­ors joined recovery teams at the charred ruin.

Firefighte­rs in Oakland, east of San Francisco, found the remains of nearly three dozen victims as they sifted through the debris-filled shell of the two-story converted warehouse being used by an artists’ collective.

The cause of the fire was still undetermin­ed, officials said. Arson is not suspected, but investigat­ors want to find out if the building, which was often used for musical performanc­es, had a history of code violations.

Mayor Libby Schaaf said the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office activated its criminal investigat­ion team at the fire scene.

A representa­tive of the prosecutor’s office is monitoring the recovery process, she said, adding that she was not authorized to say if a criminal probe was under way.

The mayor said the city’s first priority was finding the victims and supporting the families. “We have delivered the unacceptab­le and horrific news of losing a loved one to seven of our families.”

The blaze, which erupted about 11:30 p.m. on Friday, is the deadliest in the United States since 100 people perished in a 2003 Rhode Island nightclub fire.

As of Sunday evening, only 35 to 40 percent of the building had been searched, said Sergeant Ray Kelly, spokesman for the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office.

He said some of the victims were under 18 years old, although most were in their 20s and 30s.

The recovery operation was delayed for hours as the roof collapsed onto the second floor, and in some spots, the second story had fallen onto the first, making it unsafe to enter.

The warehouse, which served as a base for the Ghost Ship Artists Collective, was one of many converted lofts in the city’s Fruitvale district, a mostly Latino area where rents are generally lower than in the rest of Oakland.

 ?? REUTERS/LUCY NICHOLSON ?? Recovery teams examine the charred remains of the two-story converted warehouse that caught fire killing dozens in Oakland, California on Sunday.
REUTERS/LUCY NICHOLSON Recovery teams examine the charred remains of the two-story converted warehouse that caught fire killing dozens in Oakland, California on Sunday.

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