The Morning Call

Two Pa. companies blamed for fatal London fire

- By Maryclaire Dale

Faulty building materials helped spread a devastatin­g fire at London’s Grenfell Tower in 2017, turning the residentia­l complex into a “flaming coffin” for the 72 people who died, according to a product liability suit filed Tuesday in the United States.

Nearly 250 survivors and families of victims joined the suit, which targets U.S. companies that made products used at the complex. The suit was filed in a state court in Philadelph­ia.

“This fire originated and spread because of decisions made in the United States by United States corporatio­ns that prioritize­d profits over safety,” said attorney Robert Mongeluzzi, who is known for winning huge legal awards over deadly constructi­on accidents.

The lawsuit does not seek specific monetary damages. It would be up to a jury to decide how much money to award. Mongeluzzi expects it to take more than two years for the case to go to trial.

The Grenfell blaze started two years ago June 14 in an apartment refrigerat­or and raced up the side of the 24-story residentia­l building. The building’s exterior cladding was made of highly flammable material that can’t be used in U.S. skyscraper­s, the plaintiffs lawyers said. The insulation was similarly combustibl­e, they said.

The suit names refrigerat­or maker Whirlpool, based in Benton Harbor, Michigan; Pittsburgh cladding manufactur­er Arconic Inc.; and insulation maker Celotex, whose corporate parent, French manufactur­er Saint-Gobain, has its U.S. headquarte­rs in the Philadelph­ia suburbs.

The suit accused Arconic of cutting corners by using a polyethyle­ne product instead of a more expensive, fire-resistant material — sending the message that “foreign lives are worth less than American lives.”

The insulation produced by Celotex released cyanide gas that killed several of the victims and caused lasting injuries in some of the survivors, according to another plaintiffs’ lawyer, Jeffrey Goodman.

Both products have since been pulled from the market, the lawyers said.

“This fire spread with incredible speed, raced its way up the tower,” Mongeluzzi said. “The problem with Celotex insulation and Arconic Reynobond PE cladding is they burn like gasoline. They didn’t retard the flames, they accelerate­d the flames.”

All three companies issued statements Tuesday extending sympathies to victims and pledging their cooperatio­n with the public inquiry underway in London.

Whirlpool noted that two separate investigat­ions have found no fault with the refrigerat­or model. Celotex said its insulation was just one element of the cladding system used on the tower. Arconic said it would respond in court.

The lead plaintiff in the suit is Gloria Trevisan, a 26-year-old architect who ended a phone call with her mother so she wouldn’t hear her screams before she died. Trevisan died along with boyfriend Marco Gottardi, 27, who told his father in a call the stairwell was full of smoke, trapping them inside. The couple had moved into a top-floor flat from Italy just two months before.

The plaintiffs include 177 survivors and relatives of 69 of the dead. Dozens of survivors suffered “life-altering physical, emotional and psychologi­cal injuries,” the suit said.

The tower is in the North Kensington neighborho­od, a working-class, multiethni­c area next to some of the richest neighborho­ods in Britain. Some observers asked whether hazards in the Grenfell complex, which had 120 apartments that housed as many as 600 people, were ignored because its residents were mainly poor.

A tenant group had complained for years about the risk of a fire in the building, owned by the local government in the borough of Kensington and Chelsea.

Some people jumped to their deaths rather than face the flames, and witnesses reported seeing small children thrown from the tower by their families in a desperate bid for survival.

The Metropolit­an Police force has said it isn’t likely to submit its files to prosecutor­s, to weigh potential criminal charges, until the latter part of 2021, after the public inquiry is completed.

The Grenfell United survivors’ group this year called the delay “extremely frustratin­g and dishearten­ing.”

 ?? MATT DUNHAM/AP ?? A resident in a nearby building watches smoke rise from London’s Grenfell Tower in 2017. Faulty building materials helped spread a devastatin­g fire there, according to a lawsuit.
MATT DUNHAM/AP A resident in a nearby building watches smoke rise from London’s Grenfell Tower in 2017. Faulty building materials helped spread a devastatin­g fire there, according to a lawsuit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States