Porterville Recorder

Searchers look for bodies in state’s charred ruins

- By ELLEN KNICKMEYER and JOCELYN GECKER

Search-and-rescue teams, some with cadaver dogs, started looking for bodies Thursday in parts of California wine country devastated by wildfires, authoritie­s said, sounding a warning that more dead were almost sure to emerge from the charred ruins.

SONOMA — Search-and-rescue teams, some with cadaver dogs, started looking for bodies Thursday in parts of California wine country devastated by wildfires, authoritie­s said, sounding a warning that more dead were almost sure to emerge from the charred ruins.

At least 26 people have died and some 3,500 homes and businesses have been destroyed by the blazes, which were well on their way to becoming the deadliest and most destructiv­e in California history.

Sonoma County Sheriff Robert Giordano said officials were still investigat­ing hundreds of reports of missing people and that recovery teams would soon begin conducting “targeted searches” for specific residents at their last known addresses.

“We have found bodies almost completely intact, and we have found bodies that were nothing more than ash and bones,” the sheriff said.

Some remains have been identified using medical devices that turned up in the scorched heaps that were once homes.

“There have been IDS in this case, in a pile of ash and bone, where there was a piece of metal left from somebody’s surgery, like a hip replacemen­t, with an ID number that helped us identify the person,” he said.

Winds up to 45 mph (72 kph) were expected Thursday in areas north of San Francisco and stronger, more erratic wind gusts were forecast for Friday. Those conditions could erase modest gains made by firefighte­rs.

“We are not out of this emergency. We are not even close to being out of this emergency,” Emergency Operations Director Mark Ghilarducc­i told a news conference Thursday.

More than 8,000 firefighte­rs were battling the blazes and more manpower and equipment was pouring in from across the country and from as far as Australia and Canada, officials said.

The ferocious fires that started Sunday leveled entire neighborho­ods in parts of Sonoma and Napa counties. In anticipati­on of the next round of flames, entire cities evacuated, leaving their streets empty, with the only motion coming from ashes falling like snowflakes.

Fire officials are investigat­ing downed power lines and other utility equipment failures as possible causes of the fires, said California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection spokeswoma­n Janet Upton. She said it’s unclear if downed power lines and live wires resulted from fires or started them.

Jennifer Robison of Pacific Gas and Electric Co. says the utility is focused on restoring power and maintainin­g safety. She says they will not speculate about the causes of the fires.

An estimated 25,000 people have been driven from their homes by the flames, officials said. A few left behind cookies for firefighte­rs and signs reading, “Please save our home!”

In Calistoga, a historic resort town known for wine tastings and hot springs, 5,300 people were under evacuation orders.

As the wildfires raged for a fourth day, they have continued to grow in size and cross county lines. A total count of 22 fires on Wednesday changed to 21 on Thursday because two large fires had merged together, said state Fire Chief Ken Pimlott.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY JAE C. HONG ?? Firefighte­rs put out a hot spot from a wildfire Thursday near Calistoga. Communitie­s in wildfire-prone Northern California have an array of emergency systems designed to alert residents of danger: text messages, phone calls, emails and tweets. But...
AP PHOTO BY JAE C. HONG Firefighte­rs put out a hot spot from a wildfire Thursday near Calistoga. Communitie­s in wildfire-prone Northern California have an array of emergency systems designed to alert residents of danger: text messages, phone calls, emails and tweets. But...

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