Police Eye Teenage Arsonists in Oklahoma Wildfire as Blazes Destroy Homes, Kill 3
MIDWEST
CITY, Okla. — A wind-whipped blaze that destroyed more than 50 homes
in this Oklahoma City suburb was intentionally set, fire officials said
Friday.
An
area near a wrecker service where the fire started Thursday is
frequented by teenagers from a nearby high school and investigators
were looking into the possibility that they might have set the blaze,
Midwest City Fire Marshal Jerry Lojka said.
Authorities have not identified any suspects or determined a motive, he said.
The
fire, one of several statewide driven by strong winds and fueled by dry
grass and brush, engulfed homes throughout east Oklahoma County,
including in Midwest City and Choctaw. So far, more than 170 houses had
burned down in the state and 49 people were injured, the Oklahoma
Department of Emergency Management said.
Fire investigators were still trying to determine what caused the other fires.
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The
battle against wildfires in western and central Oklahoma and across the
state line in Texas eased Friday as 60 mph winds diminished, allowing
evacuated residents to return to neighborhoods with charred homes,
blackened vegetation and ruined cars. At least three people were killed
in Texas.
The
fires began Thursday afternoon along the Interstate 35, the main
north-south highway through central Oklahoma. Parts of the highway
reopened Friday after being closed for several hours.
Oklahoma
Gov. Brad Henry declared a state of emergency for 31 central and
southern Oklahoma communities, which allows state agencies to speed the
delivery of needed resources. Texas Gov. Rick Perry on Friday asked
FEMA to issue an emergency declaration that would provide federal
assets and resources for 199 threatened counties.
Residents
evacuated while the fires raged were allowed to return home. For
Sammetra Christmon of Midwest City, there was only a blackened, smoking
ruin where her home had been.
"The
memories, the photos, this is the house I have worked all my life for,"
she said Friday as she and her family picked through the smoldering
debris. Her 9-year-old daughter was taking it hard.
"She's devastated, just in tears this morning," Christmon said. "This is the only house she's ever known."
Water-dropping helicopters couldn't assist the ground effort Thursday because winds gusted to more than 60 mph in some areas.
"Anytime
you have high winds and low humidity, it's just the perfect storm for
wildfires, and that's what's happening here," Oklahoma Emergency
Management Director Albert Ashwood said.
In
northern and central Texas, blazes that began Thursday continued to
race across thousands of parched acres Friday, overrunning the towns of
Sunset and Stoneburg and forcing the temporary evacuations in several
others.
Linda
Freeman, who was told Thursday to evacuate her mobile home in Sunset,
said she went to her son's house about 10 miles away where "he turned
on the news, and I saw my home burning." On Friday, all that remained
were the steel stairs that once led to her front door.
The town's fire chief, Alan Campbell, said nine homes had burned to the ground.
Montague
County Sheriff Paul Cunningham said Friday that a woman died, possibly
from a heart attack, after calling for an ambulance in a fire near
Bowie on Thursday. WFAA-TV of Dallas-Fort Worth reported two other fire
victims: the television station's former reporter, Matt Quinn, and his
wife, Cathy. Their son was injured and was in fair condition at
Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas, the station said.
The
Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management said a firefighter helping
battle a blaze in Lincoln County, northeast of Oklahoma City, was
hospitalized with burns and another person was severely injured after
losing control of a vehicle on a smoke-covered road in Stephens County
in southern Oklahoma.
Other injuries ranged from minor to moderate, officials said.
At
the Midwest City Community Center, where about 75 residents flocked
after flames threatened their homes, Kanisha Busby waited for her
parents to arrive. Their home, where she grew up, was destroyed but
nobody was hurt.
"It's
hard, but all that stuff is material things that can be replaced; lives
can't be replaced," Busby said. Residents were given sufficient warning
to evacuate, and her father also managed to save his dog, she said.
Susan
Staggs, who lives near Midwest City, said Friday that she and her
neighbors who gathered at an evacuation point Thursday night could see
the glow of flames, but didn't know if their homes were being engulfed.
"After
dark, you could just see the flames crossing the road," she said. "I
had two cats in my house and my horse and goats were still there." Her
home was spared, it turned out, because a pile of gravel and dirt from
her neighbor's driveway project served as a firebreak. But the
neighbor's home was lost.
