Marysville Appeal-Democrat

2 bodies found in Butte Fire remains

- By Brian Skoloff and Kristin J. Bender Associated Press

MIDDLETOWN – Officials searched the burned-out remains of homes in Lake County on Wednesday, looking for a former police reporter and several other people who authoritie­s fear were killed in a fast-moving blaze in that part of the state.

About 170 southeast, in the Sierra Nevada foothills, two bodies were found inside burnedout homes Tuesday from the Butte Fire, Calaveras County coroner Kevin Raggio said.

One of the victims was identified as Mark McCloud, 65, who was found inside his residence in the Mountain Ranch area. Raggio wouldn’t release the name of the second victim, also found in Mountain Ranch, because the family has not been notified.

He said both were found in an area where mandatory evacuation­s were ordered after the fire burning 60 miles southeast of Sacramento exploded in size over the weekend.

Fire investigat­ors are looking into whether that blaze was sparked after a live tree came in contact with Pacific Gas and Electric Co. power lines, California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection spokesman Daniel Berlant said.

Barry Anderson, PG&E vice president of emergency preparedne­ss and operations, said the utility is cooperatin­g fully with the Cal Fire investigat­ion and is reviewing the inspection and patrol data for 2014 and 2015 for the area near this fire.

The deaths came in addition to an elderly, disabled woman whose body was found Sunday in the ruins of her Lake County home about 100 miles north of San Francisco.

Authoritie­s were searching nearby for a 69-year-old Leonard Neft, who was reported missing by his family. His burned-out car was discovered on a route he would have used to escape.

“We have reports of several others that may have perished in the fire,” Lake County Sheriff Brian Martin said during a tour of the disaster zone with state emergency officials.

Neft, who worked for the San Jose Mercury News, last spoke with his family Saturday.

His house was in the same area where Barbara McWilliams, 72, was found dead. She told her caretaker she didn’t want to leave her home near Middletown and would be fine.

Martin was among the state and local officials who traveled in a convoy of government SUVs to inspect the still-smoldering ruins in the devastated Lake County region.

Smoking power lines dangled overhead in one area as officials looked over the hardest-hit places.

The officials were considerin­g asking President Barack Obama for emergency federal assistance. Obama and Gov. Jerry Brown were expected to discuss the matter Wednesday.

“It’s not a pretty picture,” state fire chief Kim Zagaris, said on the tour. “There’s going to be a lot of heartbreak for the folks who live out here.”

Zagaris said the official tally of homes destroyed in the Lake County fire stood at 603 – a figure that’s expected to increase.

Sheriff’s deputies and others have responded to a number of missing-persons reports since the fire broke out Saturday. Many of those unaccounte­d for could be staying with relatives, on vacation or not affected by the fire, officials said.

The fire has consumed more than 109 square miles. Crews were gaining ground on it and more than doubled containmen­t from 15 percent to 35 percent, Cal Fire said.

The weather was cooperatin­g, with rain falling steadily at an evacuation center where hundreds of people were staying in trucks and tents. The center at the Napa County fairground­s was feeding about 1,000 people at each meal. The food was being prepared by wine country chefs who are donating their time and skill.

Some residents have cried as they walked through the rubble of their homes. Others shared amazing stories of survival as they surveyed the twisted metal and smoking ruins lefts behind by the fire.

Ranch managers Don and Martha Grimm barely escaped with only the clothes they were wearing.

The couple, both in their 70s, held hands as they returned to their neighborho­od to find ruins where their home once stood. Martha Grimm broke down in tears.

“We didn’t have a chance to react,” she said. “It was here, and we got out with the clothes on our back. All of our memories, everything is gone.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? A firefighti­ng plane drops a load of fire retardant over a smoldering hillside on Tuesday in Middletown. The fire that sped through Middletown and other parts of rural Lake County, less than 100 miles north of San Francisco, has continued to burn since...
Associated Press A firefighti­ng plane drops a load of fire retardant over a smoldering hillside on Tuesday in Middletown. The fire that sped through Middletown and other parts of rural Lake County, less than 100 miles north of San Francisco, has continued to burn since...
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