Children Killed House Fire

Charred siding and items are strewn about at a two-family home on Wednesday, in Somers, Conn., in the aftermath of a fatal fire. Four children died Tuesday night in a fire that broke out in the two-family home. The children, ages 5, 6, 8 and 12, were found inside the house where 11 people lived, fire and town officials said. Jessica Hill/Associated Press

SOMERS, Conn. — A fire that raced through a two-family home in northern Connecticut on Tuesday night killed four children and several animals as firefighters struggled with rescue efforts because of clutter, authorities said.

The four children who died in the Somers blaze were ages 5, 6, 8 and 12 and lived in one side of the house with their mother and three other siblings, fire and town officials said. The mother was not home at the time and her 19-year-old daughter, who was watching over the other children, escaped by jumping out of a second-story window, First Selectman Tim Keeney said.

It wasn’t immediately clear what caused the fire in the close-knit town of just under 10,000 people about 25 miles northeast of Hartford. State and local officials were investigating. The blaze did not appear to be caused by a criminal act, State Trooper First Class Pedro Muniz said.

“This is a small community so everybody knows everybody else, and these obviously are four kids that are in our community so it definitely hurts a lot of our members,” town Fire Chief John Roache said at an early afternoon news conference. “Our thoughts and prayers go out to this family.”

A neighbor, who did not want to be identified, described a heartbreaking scene with people screaming and the three survivors jumping from the second floor.

Inspectors taking measurements walked around the shell of the home Wednesday, where several charred bicycles and a basketball lay near the front steps.

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Roache said firefighters rescued three dogs from the home, but a litter of puppies died.

The 19-year-old daughter and two of her siblings survived. One of them had serious burn injuries and two had minor injuries, said officials, who did not disclose which sibling suffered the serious injuries.

Four people who were in the other side of the house escaped without major injuries. A firefighter suffered a burn injury and was treated and released from a hospital, officials said.

Chief Medical Examiner James Gill said all of the victims died from smoke inhalation and burns. The victims’ names were being withheld because their identities had not yet been confirmed, he said.

The fire was reported shortly before 10:30 p.m. and the first firefighters arrived about five minutes later to find the entire front of the house on fire, Roache said. The flames made it difficult to enter through the front, and items in the home made it difficult to get through the back door, he said. Around 60 firefighters from 12 agencies responded to the blaze, he said.

Local school officials said counseling would be offered this week to students and staff affected by the loss.

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“This is an unprecedented tragedy in this town,” Keeney, the first selectman, said Wednesday afternoon. “This is a town where people know their neighbors and people know these kids.”

Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont was among those offering condolences Wednesday.

The family that lost loved ones in the fire was offered help by the American Red Cross and social service officials, authorities said. The town also set up a “Angel Fund” to collect donations for the family, Keeney said. GoFundMe pages also were created by family and friends to help raise money for both families.

 

Associated Press writer Dave Collins in Hartford, Connecticut, contributed to this report.

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