Toronto Star

Teams on ground to find missing and ID the dead

Mobile morgues brought into California along with DNA analysis system

- MARTHA MENDOZA AND GILLIAN FLACCUS

PARADISE, CALIF.— Ernest Foss was a musician who gave lessons out of his home when he lived in San Francisco, where an amplifier that ran the length of a wall served as the family’s living room couch. Carl Wiley refurbishe­d tires for Michelin. Jesus Fernandez was described as a loving father and loyal friend.

They were among the first victims identified in the aftermath of the deadliest, most destructiv­e wildfire in California history, an inferno blamed for at least 48 deaths, with authoritie­s ramping up the search Tuesday for still more souls.

The flames all but obliterate­d the northern California town of Paradise, population 27,000, and ravaged surroundin­g areas last Thursday. About 7,700 homes were destroyed.

The exact number of missing was unclear, but many friends and relatives of those living in the fire zone said they hadn’t heard from loved ones. Some went to shelters looking for the missing.

Efforts were underway to bring in mobile morgues, cadaver dogs, a rapid DNA analysis system for identifyin­g victims and an additional 150 search-and-rescue personnel on top of 13 teams already looking for remains.

Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea’s office has identified four of the victims, publicly naming three.

James Wiley said sheriff ’s deputies informed him that his father, Carl, was among the dead. The elder Wiley, 77, was a tire-recapper, and the family lived in Alaska for many years before moving to Butte County decades ago.

James Wiley said his father was a stoic veteran, and the two had not spoken in six years. “Hey, I lost him a long time ago,” the younger man said.

Foss, 63, moved to Paradise eight years ago because the high cost of living pushed him out of the San Francisco Bay Area, according to his daughter, Angela Loo. He had swollen limbs and couldn’t walk. He had also been on oxygen.

“I love that he shared his gift of music with me and so many others,” Loo told KTVU-TV in Oakland.

Myrna Pascua, whose husband was best friends with Fernandez, 48, the man known as “Zeus,” called him a “tireless provider, a dependable and loyal friend, a considerat­e neighbour, and loving father. He will be sorely missed by all who knew him.”

Before the Paradise tragedy, the deadliest single fire on record in California was a 1933 blaze in Griffith Park in Los Angeles that killed 29.

 ?? JIM WILSON THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Investigat­ors in Paradise, Calif., examine wreckage as the search for the dead continued Tuesday.
JIM WILSON THE NEW YORK TIMES Investigat­ors in Paradise, Calif., examine wreckage as the search for the dead continued Tuesday.

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