East Bay Times

House explosion kills firefighte­r and injures 13 others

- By John Yoon and Aimee Ortiz

A firefighte­r was killed after a house in Virginia exploded Friday night, injuring 13 other people and scattering pieces of the home across the neighborho­od, officials said.

Firefighte­rs arrived at the home in Sterling, Virginia, a suburb of Washington, about 7:40 p.m., said James Williams, the assistant chief of operations for Loudoun County Fire and Rescue. They were responding to a call about a gas leak, department spokespers­on Laura Rinehart said.

Upon arrival, they located a 500-gallon undergroun­d propane tank with a leak and called for help from the county's hazmat team, according to Rinehart.

Soon after, the house exploded with firefighte­rs inside, leaving people trapped and the area in “total devastatio­n,” Williams told reporters.

A neighbor living across from the destroyed house, AJ Albaladejo, 50, said the blast had damaged her garage door, knocked picture frames and a bookshelf off the walls and sent debris flying into her lawn.

“I had just come home from the gym,” she said in an interview. “It shook the entire house.”

Albaladejo, a nurse, said that she had helped two women who lived in the house that exploded. They were bleeding from their faces and heads, she said, and clearly in shock.

“It's a miracle that they did make it out,” she said. “They were just outside of the driveway and leaving the premises when the house exploded.”

Aerial footage of the scene from local news media showed smoke and debris covering the area and barely any signs of the destroyed house.

“There's a debris field well into the street and into the neighborin­g homes,” Williams said.

As fire authoritie­s investigat­ed the cause of the explosion, Washington Gas, the local utility company, said in a statement that it was “verifying the integrity of our system in the surroundin­g area.”

Emergency medical services from Loudoun and Fairfax counties said they identified 13 patients in addition to the fatally injured firefighte­r. It includs 11 firefighte­rs and two civilians with varying degrees of injuries. Of the injured firefighte­rs, four remained hospitaliz­ed Saturday, officials said on social media.

Loudoun County Fire and Rescue identified the dead firefighte­r Saturday as Trevor Brown, 45, of the Sterling Volunteer Fire Co. He is survived by his wife and three children, Chief Keith Johnson said during a news conference.

“We lost a family member,” the chief said. “We lost one of our own.”

He said that “most of us started as volunteers in our careers.”

“It makes no difference whether you do this for pay or whether you do this for volunteers,” Johnson said. “The hazards are the same to all of us.”

Johnson said firefighte­rs were in the house when it exploded Friday.

“Our folks did their job. They showed up and they did what they had to do,” he said. “We prepare for this. We have a full plan for dealing with line-ofduty deaths. We hope we never have to use it, but we're using it today.”

The investigat­ion into what caused the explosion continues, Johnson said.

“At this time, I do not have any complete cause of the fire,” he said, adding, “We can assume it was propane related.”

 ?? NICKI JHABVALA — THE WASHINGTON POST VIA AP ?? First responders arrive at the scene after an explosion at a house in Sterling, Va., late Friday.
NICKI JHABVALA — THE WASHINGTON POST VIA AP First responders arrive at the scene after an explosion at a house in Sterling, Va., late Friday.

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