San Francisco Chronicle

Misery: 63 dead, count of missing soars to 631 — relatives offer DNA

- By Sarah Ravani, Jill Tucker and Gwendolyn Wu

PARADISE, Butte County — Authoritie­s made a distressin­g revelation Thursday as firefighte­rs gained ground in containing the worst blaze in California history: the number of missing has skyrockete­d to 631.

The news, delivered at a news conference Thursday evening by Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea, came after search crews recovered the remains of seven more victims, bringing the death toll in the disaster to 63.

Earlier in the day, the Sheriff ’s Department released a list of nearly 300

people who were unaccounte­d for. By evening, Honea said the doubling of the number of missing individual­s was the result of a comprehens­ive review of 911 calls or other early reports of people who could not be located. It’s possible many of those people have not been in contact yet with family or friends, he added.

Firefighte­rs made progress on controllin­g the 141,000acre wildfire, increasing containmen­t lines to 40 percent Thursday.

The cause of the blaze remains under investigat­ion, and officials have said they’re looking at the possibilit­y that it was sparked by electrical equipment. But Thursday, they revealed that they have identified a possible second origin of the blaze near Concow. They provided no additional details.

Meanwhile, officials said that more than a dozen patients — including three firefighte­rs — have been treated at Northern California burn centers in the days after the fire that started Nov. 8 leveled Paradise and surroundin­g Butte County communitie­s.

In addition, officials were alerted that President Trump planned to visit the disaster area Saturday to meet with “individual­s impacted by the wildfires,” according to a White House statement.

On Thursday, officials at the Oroville headquarte­rs of the Sheriff’s Department began collecting DNA samples from people who may have lost loved ones.

Several families arrived in the morning to submit cheek-swab samples to help authoritie­s possibly identify their loved ones. The samples are needed because, in many cases, fire victims were burned beyond recognitio­n. The county has brought in a Colorado company, ANDE, to expedite the process.

Honea said that of the 63 victims, authoritie­s have tentativel­y identified 53 but are waiting for DNA results to confirm who they are.

ANDE’s technology, which looks like a large microwave oven, can analyze DNA within about two hours, a lot faster than older methods. The FBI authorized the company’s technique as part of the Rapid DNA Act of 2017 for use in solving crimes or assisting in war zones. This is the first time the firm has been called to a natural disaster, said spokeswoma­n Annette Mattern.

“We’re just honored we could in some small way be helpful,” Mattern said.

The search and recovery effort is a huge undertakin­g. It includes nearly 500 crew members who have been sifting through debris for signs of remains.

In Paradise and the neighborin­g community of Magalia, search workers wearing white hazardous-materials suits and face masks and carrying rakes scoured properties Thursday. Toward the center of each town, crews worked furiously to bring evacuated residents one step closer to returning to their properties to assess the damage.

But there is still a great deal to do before authoritie­s can consider repopulati­ng the fire zone and opening the checkpoint­s, officials said.

Melted power lines must be replaced, along with wooden utility poles that are now broken into pieces, some suspended from wires. Trees that burned from the inside out threaten to crash to the ground.

“People can’t come into these areas until the power lines and the trees are rendered safe,” said Capt. Chris Vestal of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. “Typically repopulati­on is allowed in phases. Once an area is out of danger, people can go back.”

Pacific Gas and Electric Co. workers were out in force replacing power equipment as authoritie­s installed stop signs to replace ruined stoplights. Piles of debris were still smoking around the towns.

Complicati­ng recovery efforts Thursday was an officer-involved, fatal shooting in the evacuation zone near Paradise. A man wanted in connection with two homicides in 2014 was located in a parking lot and subsequent­ly led authoritie­s on a car chase that ultimately ended with the suspect shot and killed after he appeared to point a metallic object at officers, according to Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey.

A Sutter County sheriff police dog named Bandit was killed in the encounter, as was a pit bull that was with the suspect.

As of Thursday, the blaze had destroyed 11,862 structures, including 9.700 homes, Cal Fire said.

Smoke from the wildfire continued to plague Northern California, closing down schools across much of the Bay Area as well as cable car lines in San Francisco. Chronicle staff writers Nanette Asimov and Evan Sernoffsky

contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Santiago Mejia / The Chronicle ?? Most structures along Melene Court (left) and Mountain Meadow Court in Paradise (Butte County) were destroyed in the Camp Fire, but two survived.
Santiago Mejia / The Chronicle Most structures along Melene Court (left) and Mountain Meadow Court in Paradise (Butte County) were destroyed in the Camp Fire, but two survived.

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