Los Angeles Times

4 dead, 1 missing after house explosion in Pennsylvan­ia

Two other homes are destroyed by fire in a suburb of Pittsburgh. Crews from at least 18 department­s respond.

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PLUM, Pa. — Four people were dead and a fifth was unaccounte­d for after a house explosion in western Pennsylvan­ia that destroyed three structures and damaged at least a dozen others Saturday morning, authoritie­s said.

Allegheny County officials said three people were taken to hospitals after the blast shortly before 10:30 a.m. in the borough of Plum, about 20 miles east of Pittsburgh.

One of them was listed as critical and two were treated and released. More than 20 firefighte­rs were evaluated, many for heat exhaustion, authoritie­s said.

The Allegheny County Medical Examiner’s Office was expected to provide additional informatio­n about the deceased victims.

Emergency officials suspended operations Saturday night due to weather and concern for the safety of investigat­ors. Crews were expected to resume working at the site on Sunday morning.

Emergency responders reported people trapped under debris after one house apparently exploded and two others were engulfed in flames, county spokespers­on Amie Downs said.

Crews from at least 18 fire department­s worked to douse the flames with the help of water tankers from Allegheny and Westmorela­nd counties, Downs said.

Officials told reporters at the scene they did not know exactly who was at home and who may have had visitors at the time of the explosion, so they could not provide an exact number of people considered missing.

The cause of the explosion is under investigat­ion by Plum and county law enforcemen­t and the county fire marshal’s office. The state public utilities commission and local utilities also were at the scene.

George Emanuele, who lives three houses down from the home that exploded, told the TribuneRev­iew that he and a neighbor went to the home before the fire got out of control, where they found a man lying in the backyard and dragged him away.

Rafal Kolankowsk­i, who lives a few houses away, told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette that the explosion broke the windows in his house and knocked him and his wife to the floor.

After recovering and checking on his son, Kolankowsk­i went outside and a neighbor told him another woman had been upstairs in another home and a man was in the basement. The other woman later emerged covered in ash, but the person in the basement had not yet come out, he said.

“It’s just tragic; I mean, it looks like a war zone — it looks like a bomb hit our neighborho­od and it’s just unfortunat­e,” Kolankowsk­i said. “I was just with some of the neighbors yesterday, right, and now this happens.”

Jeremy Rogers, who lives two doors down, told the paper he had been out shopping when he got an alert about a problem at his house and saw “all sorts of stuff flying around.” His family was able to get out safely and he was allowed to go inside quickly to retrieve his dog, although he could not locate the family’s three cats.

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