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Manslaught­er charges eyed in London blaze

Police: Refrigerat­or touched off deadly Grenfell Tower fire

- By Danica Kirka

LONDON — Police are considerin­g filing manslaught­er charges related to the fire at a west London apartment tower that killed at least 79 people.

In its most detailed briefing yet onthe criminal investigat­ion, the Metropolit­an Police on Friday confirmed residents’ suspicions that the June 14 inferno at Grenfell Tower was touched off by a refrigerat­or fire.

The department also said exterior cladding attached to the 24-story public housing project during a recent renovation failed safety tests conducted by investigat­ors, and that police have seized documents from a number of organizati­ons.

“We are looking at every criminal offense from manslaught­er onwards,” Detective Superinten­dent Fiona McCormack said. “We are looking at all health and safety and fire safety offenses, andwe are reviewing every company at the moment involved in the building and refurbishm­ent of GrenfellTo­wer.”

The government has ordered an examinatio­n of the refrigerat­or model that started the blaze. McCormack said the Hotpoint model FF175BP refrigerat­orfreezer had not been subject to any product recalls before the fire.

Hotpoint said Friday that “words cannot express our sorrow at this terrible tragedy” and added it was working with authoritie­s to examine the appliance.

The overnight fire rapidly engulfed Grenfell Tower, with flames shooting up the outside of the building, raising concerns that the cladding material attached to the concrete block didn’t comply with fire-safety rules.

Police are looking at all parts of the cladding system and its installati­on, McCormack said.

“Preliminar­y tests show the insulation samples collected from Grenfell Tower combusted soon after the test started,” she said. “The initial tests on equivalent aluminum composite tiles failed the safety tests.”

Authoritie­s nowacknowl­edge the risks posed by exterior cladding to thousands of people around the country who live in blocks like Grenfell Tower.

The government has called on all building owners, public and private, to submit samples of cladding material used for testing. Samples from14 buildings in London, Manchester and Plymouth have already been found to be combustibl­e.

Fears about cladding are not limited to apartment buildings— at least one hotel chain is calling in experts to make certain it meets safety regulation­s. Premier Inn said Friday it had “concerns” about the material used on some of its buildings, though it is different from the type used at Grenfell Tower.

The London borough of Camden said Friday night that it has begun evacuating 800 households in tower blocks after fire authoritie­s said they could not guarantee the safety of residents.

Camden council leader Georgia Gould told Sky News that a rest center has been set up and that hotels were being found for residents.

Camden is one of the councils in England that has learned that combustibl­e cladding has been placed on buildings during renovation projects, though they also had fire-resistant cladding.

Gould said the repair work is expected to take two to threeweeks.

McCormack also repeated calls for anyone with informatio­n about the fire and all those in the tower at the time to come forward as police continue to comb through the devastated building to try to identify all the victims.

Police said 79 people are either dead or missing and presumed dead in the blaze, although that number may change.

To make sure everyone comes forward, London Mayor Sadiq Khan pledged to seek an amnesty for people who may have been living in the public housing block illegally. Prime Minister Theresa May also said the government won’t penalize any fire survivors in the country illegally.

 ?? NIKLAS HALLE'N/GETTY-AFP ?? Messages in tribute to the victims of the Grenfell Tower block fire are left Thursday near the scene in west London.
NIKLAS HALLE'N/GETTY-AFP Messages in tribute to the victims of the Grenfell Tower block fire are left Thursday near the scene in west London.

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