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Tag: deadly fire

  • Survivors in Palisades and Altadena mark anniversary of deadly fires with anger and mourning

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    One year after two of the most destructive wildfires in California’s history erupted just hours apart, survivors commemorated the day in Altadena and Pacific Palisades with a mixture of anger and somber remembrance.

    At the American Legion veterans post in the Palisades, hundreds gathered at a military-style white-glove ceremony to pay respects to the 12 families who lost loved ones in the Palisades fire.

    Just down the street, an even larger crowd shouted the rally cry “They let us burn,” to demand comprehensive disaster planning, relief for families working to rebuild and accountability for government missteps that they say enabled the disaster and have slowed the recovery.

    In Altadena, survivors congregated at the Eaton Fire Collaborative’s community center with a clear message: They were not backing down in the fight to return home.

    “This year has been the hardest year of our lives,” said Joy Chen, executive director of the Eaton Fire Survivor Network. “Unimaginable grief. The 31 people who died that day, and the hundreds who have died prematurely since. Home lost. Jobs lost. Incomes lost. A sense of safety and identity stripped away.”

    In the evening, Atladenans plan to gather at a beloved family-owned burger joint that miraculously still stands amid a sea of empty lots. The restaurant, Fair Oaks Burger, reopened an outdoor kitchen for residents and recovery workers just weeks after the fire and has become a lifeline for the neighborhood.

    Jessica Rogers, who lost her home in the Palisades fire and has since become the executive director of the Palisades Long-Term Recovery Group, which organized the remembrance ceremony, said that people are still processing what happened over the last year.

    “The five different stages of grief — you can feel them. Sometimes people can feel them almost all at the same time,” she said. “There is no right or wrong way to process grief. Everybody processes it in their own way, at their own speed and their own time. And some need to do it at home, behind closed doors; others need to do it very vocally, out in public.”

    Pacific Palisades residents Julia Citron, right, cries with her mother Lainie with Palisades fire survivors

    Pacific Palisades resident Julia Citron, right, cries with her mother, Lainie, in Palisades Village on Wednesday. The Citrons lost their home in the fire. “It was the only house our children knew,” said Lainie Citron.

    (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

    Very different communities, the Palisades and Altadena share similar frustrations — with insurance companies, government agencies and disaster scammers. But on Wednesday, they directed their wrath on contrasting targets. In Altadena, activists are focused on real estate speculators and Southern California Edison, suspected of triggering the Eaton fire. In the Palisades, anger continues to mount against Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, the city’s Fire Department and state agencies.

    Inside the Palisades Legion Post, the 11-year-old daughter of Jim Cragg, the Post’s former commander, handed white roses to the families of fire victims. One of these was a family member of Rory Sykes, who perished in the blaze, who told Cragg: “He would have loved this.” Both held back tears.

    The families then led hundreds of Palisadians waiting outside — many wearing “They Let Us Burn” T-shirts — in a procession down to a small community park, where the legion had placed 13 memorials: One for each victim, and one for the many uncounted lives lost in the fire’s wake.

    In a moment of silence, Palisadians called out the names of loved ones who had died in the aftermath. Many sobbed.

    Researchers estimate the January fires resulted in upward of 400 excess deaths in L.A. County beyond the official death toll.

    1

    Steve Salinas shields from intense heat as he hoses down a neighbors rooftop

    2

    The view from the same rooftop, one year later.

    1. Steve Salinas shields from intense heat as he hoses down a neighbors rooftop on Sinaloa Ave. as the Eaton Fire continues to grow, January 8, 2025. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times) 2. The view from the same rooftop, one year later. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

    “People burned alive in their homes. There was nobody going to get them,” Kathleen Boltiansky said through tears as she watched the ceremony.

    Boltiansky, who lost her house in the fire, planned to attend the “They Let Us Burn” rally after the service. “Public safety should be item No. 1 — if they cannot provide public safety, what are they doing?”

    Just across the street, Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire” played over a loudspeaker as protesters gathered in front of the burned husk of the historic 1924 Business Block Building.

    Rally organizer Jeremy Padawer, who lost his home in the Palisades fire, took the stage. “The days of gaslighting should be over,” he called out.

    Padawer asked the audience to raise their hands if their home burned or remains contaminated.

    Hundreds of hands shot up.

    Josh Lederer, clutching a “They Let Us Burn” banner, described how he, his wife and 2-year-old daughter moved five times since the fire and are still unable to return to their home amid fights with their insurance company. He’s glad his child is too young to really understand what’s going on.

    “You feel, when there’s an emergency, your city’s going to be there to protect you, and we had nobody,” said Lederer, 42. “And since then, we’ve had nobody helping us. All we get is lip service from Karen Bass and Newsom that it’s somebody else’s fault or we’re trying to profit off this. We’re not trying to profit off anything. We want our lives back.”

    Los Angeles Police Chief Jim McDonald, left, speaks with Mayor Karen Bass

    Los Angeles Police Chief Jim McDonald, left, speaks with Mayor Karen Bass after a private ceremony where they remembered the fire victims with faith leaders, LAPD officers and city officials as flags were lowered outside City Hall.

    (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

    When ABC 7 Eyewitness News asked Bass if she thought the “They Let Us Burn” rally is how residents should commemorate the one-year anniversary, she dismissed the event.

    “I don’t think so,” she said. “But again, I think there are people who are profiting off this, and that is what I find very despicable.”

    Padawer said he had invited Bass and Gov. Gavin Newsom to the rally to listen to survivors and accept accountability, but neither joined.

    A spokesperson for Newsom’s office said the governor would meet directly with survivors in Los Angeles this week. Bass started the day at a private vigil at the Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine in Pacific Palisades, then presided over a flag-lowering ceremony at City Hall to honor the victims.

    a woman in white gloves hugs another person as people look on

    Jessica Rogers with the Palisades Long Term Recovery Group, third from left, hugs Marina Shterenberg, who lost a loved one in the Palisades fire, during a community ceremony in partnership with the Palisades American Legion Post 283, marking the one year anniversary of the fire on January 7, 2026. The ceremony honored those who lost their lives in the fire, including Mark Shterenberg.

    (Christina House/Los Angeles Times)

    Several elected officials attended the American Legion ceremony — including state Sen. Ben Allen and county Supervisor Lindsey Horvath — but only one attended the rally too: City Councilmember Traci Park. She stepped on stage at the rally in a far less somber tone than at the memorial.

    “Let’s end this culture of half-assed solutions,” she said — also noting that there were “some folks” who “didn’t want me to come here today.”

    “What happened on Jan. 7 was catastrophic failure and to pretend otherwise is just insulting,” she told the crowd. “You did not imagine what happened, and you are right to be angry.”

    In Altadena, a coalition of lawmakers, survivors and advocates at the Collaboratory community center set the tone for the second year of recovery.

    Recently, a survey from the nonprofit Department of Angels found that more than 7 out of 10 Altadena residents remain displaced from their homes. Nearly half have exhausted their savings, and over 40% have taken on personal debt to survive, said Miguel Santana, co-founder of the nonprofit.

    Among them are people like Ada Hernandez, who owned a 1950s home on Mountain View Street with her husband, Miguel, where they lived with their 5-year-old son, Mason, 2-year-old Sadie and 14-year-old dog Bentley. They moved into their home in 2018, on the same day she lost her firstborn son. But in the fire, she said, she lost every physical memory of him, including his neonatal intensive care unit pillow and handprint.

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    Now, the pain has compounded as her family has been forced to move three times over the last year. They have spent the last two months in an Airbnb with help from the Salvation Army, she said, but that runs out next Wednesday.

    “We feel forgotten,” Hernandez, 37, said. “We feel like we’re at a standstill.”

    Bass and Newsom have touted L.A.’s recovery as one of the fastest in modern California history. Bass, in particular, points to her work in cutting red tape at the Department of Building and Safety, which is reviewing and signing off on the rebuilding plans. But to many survivors, recovery still feels painfully slow.

    Avaristo Serrano helps build a home on Highview Street

    Avaristo Serrano helps build a home on Highview Street, one year after the Eaton fire.

    (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

    As of December, L.A. County had issued rebuilding permits for about 16% of homes destroyed in Altadena, and the city of L.A. issued permits for just under 14% for the Palisades, The Times found. Many whose homes survived the fire but were contaminated by smoke and ash are still fighting with their insurance companies to remediate their homes. Many homes in Altadena remain contaminated even after remediation.

    Mark Mariscal, a longtime Altadena resident, said he faced months of delays by his insurance company but, with help from the Eaton Fire Survivors Network, finally got a check in the mail. He became emotional as he remembered the lives lost and everything that transpired since Jan. 7.

    “It’s just a battle, a good one because we’re pretty sure we’re never moving again,” he said. “After we build this house the way we want it, we’re not moving again. Unless I’m sent up to my higher power.”

    For many survivors, finding a sense of peace in their healing journeys one year into recovery has proved difficult without closure. Investigations and reports into the failures that led to and exacerbated the disasters have left residents with more questions than answers.

    In October, federal investigators announced the Palisades fire appeared to explode from a small brush fire still smoldering from a week prior. Ongoing litigation has suggested that Los Angeles Fire Department leaders limited their firefighting techniques to protect sensitive plants at the request of California State Parks, and investigations by The Times found that leaders ordered firefighters to leave the site even though it was still smoldering and subsequently covered up their mistakes.

    Meanwhile, emergency officials failed to issue evacuation orders for west Altadena, a historically Black enclave, until five hours after the fire began to engulf homes in the neighborhood. An investigation by The Times found that even as the fire progressed far into the west side of town, the majority of Los Angeles County Fire Department resources remained elsewhere.

    “So many different layers of mistakes had to be made for this to occur,” Padawer told The Times. He said the rally was intended to highlight both the “gaslighting” and “solutions that can help our neighbors come home.”

    a person wearing a white glove stands at attention

    The Palisades Long Term Recovery Group, in partnership with the Palisades American Legion Post 283 hosts a community ceremony with white glove presentation of flags for the families of those lost, marking the one year anniversary of the Palisades fire on January 7, 2026.

    (Christina House/Los Angeles Times)

    Sue Kohl, president of the Pacific Palisades Community Council, said she had mixed feelings early Wednesday as reporters gathered for a news conference on the barren front lawn of what will be her new home on Iliff Street in the decimated Alphabet Streets neighborhood.

    Construction on her two-story home — surrounded by empty lots — is well underway. But she has no memories here, she said. It’s not the place where she lived for 32 years and raised five children and three stepchildren.

    The anniversary, she said, is “like emotional ping pong. You want to be positive. But at the same time — I mean, look around. At least now you see a lot of construction.”

    Many survivors say a hope for the future is the one thing that motivates them. In five years, or maybe ten, Rogers looks forward to all the little things that make the Palisades the Palisades.

    “I’d like to see children running down the streets happily. I’d like to hear them, see them on their bikes, watch the teenagers hang out at CVS, in the parks. I’d like to see all Angelenos from all parts of Los Angeles back up in our hiking trails,” she said.

    “That would bring me a lot of joy, to see our schools thriving again, and I’d love to complain about the 3 p.m. traffic — the kids’ pickup time from schools in the village,” she said. “That’s what I’d like to see come back in our community as soon as possible.”

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    Noah Haggerty, Hailey Branson-Potts, Melissa Gomez

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  • 1 person found dead in north Sacramento fire, officials say

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    1 person found dead in north Sacramento fire, officials say

    WE BEGIN WITH BREAKING NEWS. AND THAT BREAKING NEWS IS OUT OF NORTH SACRAMENTO. FIREFIGHTERS ARE INVESTIGATING AFTER ONE PERSON WAS FOUND DEAD AFTER A FIRE. THANK YOU FOR JOINING US AT FIVE. I’M ANDREA FLORES. I’M LISA GONZALEZ. FIREFIGHTERS SAY THAT PERSON WAS FOUND IN A SHED OUTSIDE A HOME ON ACACIA AVENUE, JUST A COUPLE BLOCKS FROM RIO LINDA BOULEVARD. KCRA 3’S ANDRES VALLE IS LIVE AT THE SCENE WITH THE NEWEST INFORMATION. ANDRES. WELL, GUYS, WE KNOW THAT ONE PERSON IS DEAD AND I WAS SPEAKING TO THE FAMILY WHOSE OFF SCREEN? RIGHT NOW? OF COURSE WE’RE OUT OF RESPECT. WE WON’T SHOW THEIR FACE, BUT THEY BELIEVE THAT IT WAS THEIR NEPHEW WHO WAS KILLED INSIDE THAT HOME. WE HAVE A FRAME HERE AND SHOW YOU WHAT WE’RE LOOKING AT. AS INVESTIGATORS ARE STILL ON THE SCENE HERE. WE JUST HAVE ONE FIRE ENGINE STILL IN PLACE IN FRONT OF THE HOUSE WHERE ALL OF THIS UNFOLDED. THIS HAPPENED RIGHT AROUND 130 THIS AFTERNOON. THAT’S WHEN FIRE CREWS FIRST CAME OUT HERE. AND THEY SAID THE FIRE STARTED IN THE BACK OF THE HOME. AND THIS TYPE OF SHED, WHICH IS THE BEST WAY TO DESCRIBE IT, WOULD BE CONSIDERED AN ADU. SO THIS IS A SHED THAT WAS ATTACHED TO THE HOME. THAT’S WHERE THE FIRE DID START AND EVENTUALLY SPREAD INTO THE ATTIC OF A TWO STORY HOME OF THAT TWO STORY HOME. BUT THAT CAUSED SOME ISSUES FOR FIRE CREWS. AND THIS IS WHAT SACRAMENTO CITY FIRE HAD TO SAY ABOUT THAT. WE WERE 25 MINUTES INTO THIS OPERATION, AND WE STILL HAD FIRE COMING FROM THAT ATTIC SPACE THAT WE WERE STILL TRYING TO MAKE ACCESS TO. SO THAT SHOWS YOU HOW DIFFICULT IT IS TYPICALLY ON A STRUCTURE FIRE LIKE THIS. WE HAVE KNOCKED DOWN WITHIN FIVE, MAYBE TEN MINUTES. SO WHAT WE WHAT WE HAVE TO TAKE INTO ACCOUNT AT THAT POINT AS WELL IS HOW MUCH OF THE ACTUAL STRUCTURE IS LEFT IN THERE SINCE IT’S BEEN BURNING SO LONG, AND WE DON’T WANT TO RISK ANY TYPE OF ROOF COLLAPSE. NOW BACK OUT HERE LIVE. WE STILL HAVE INVESTIGATORS ON THE SCENE HERE. THEY’RE TREATING THIS AS SUSPICIOUS UNTIL PROVEN. NOT THAT STANDARD PROTOCOL FOR THEM. WHEN THEY FIND SOMEBODY DEAD INSIDE A HOUSE FIRE. BUT LIKE I MENTIONED, I SPOKE TO THAT FAMILY. THEY BELIEVE IT’S THEIR NEPHEW. THERE’S THE FIRE CHAPLAIN CURRENTLY SPEAKING TO THEM. AND ALL I HAVE TO REALLY SAY IS OUR THOUGHTS AND PRAYERS ARE WITH THEM. BUT THAT’S THE INFORMATION THAT WE HAVE RIGHT NOW. WE’RE LIVE HERE IN NORTH SACRAMENTO. KCRA THREE N

    1 person found dead in north Sacramento fire, officials say

    Updated: 5:06 PM PST Dec 10, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    One person was found dead following a fire at a north Sacramento residence on Wednesday, according to the fire department. Crews responded to the home on Acacia Avenue near Branch Street around 1:30 p.m. for the report of a structure fire. The Sacramento Fire Department said one person was found dead inside a shed outside the main home.It’s not clear what sparked the fire. Footage from a KCRA 3 crew at the scene showed Acacia Avenue blocked off as firefighters worked to handle the fire. The person found dead has not yet been identified.This is a developing story. Stay with KCRA 3 for the latest. See news happening? Send us your photos or videos if it’s safe to do so at kcra.com/upload.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

    One person was found dead following a fire at a north Sacramento residence on Wednesday, according to the fire department.

    Crews responded to the home on Acacia Avenue near Branch Street around 1:30 p.m. for the report of a structure fire.

    The Sacramento Fire Department said one person was found dead inside a shed outside the main home.

    It’s not clear what sparked the fire.

    Footage from a KCRA 3 crew at the scene showed Acacia Avenue blocked off as firefighters worked to handle the fire.

    The person found dead has not yet been identified.

    This is a developing story. Stay with KCRA 3 for the latest.

    See news happening? Send us your photos or videos if it’s safe to do so at kcra.com/upload.

    See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

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  • Woman dead after house fire in Bethesda – WTOP News

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    A woman has died after a fire broke out in a house in Bethesda, Maryland, on Thursday afternoon.

    A woman has died after a fire broke out in a house in Bethesda, Maryland, on Thursday afternoon.

    The Montgomery County Fire and Rescue Service said a fire erupted in the basement of a two-story house on Persimmon Tree Road near Eggert Drive around 3:40 p.m.

    Pete Piringer, spokesman for the fire department, said 60 firefighters reported to the scene.

    Initial reports indicated there was smoke and someone trapped inside. Firefighters found an unconscious adult in the home and attempted to revive the person but were unsuccessful.

    Fire Chief Corey Smedley told WTOP that the “elderly woman” who died was going into cardiac arrest when first responders got to her. After several minutes of CPR, they were unable to revive her, Smedley said.

    Three other people in the house were evacuated and no other injuries were reported.

    Montgomery County police say they’re now conducting a death investigation.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Ciara Wells

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  • 2 dead, child in critical condition after early-morning fire in Largo – WTOP News

    2 dead, child in critical condition after early-morning fire in Largo – WTOP News

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    Two people are dead and a child is in critical condition following an apartment building fire in Prince George’s County, Maryland, Tuesday morning.

    Flames seen from apartment building in Largo, Md., on July 2, 2024.
    (Courtesy Prince George’s County Fire/EMS Department via X)

    Courtesy Prince George’s County Fire/EMS Department via X

    Black dog behind metal gate
    WTOP’s Luke Lukert reported this dog, which was inside the apartment during the fire, was rescued and resuscitated.
    (WTOP/Luke Lukert)

    WTOP/Luke Lukert

    Fire engine on scene of apartment building fire
    Fire engine on scene of apartment building fire in Largo, Md., on July 2, 2024.
    (WTOP/Luke Lukert)

    WTOP/Luke Lukert

    Collapsed roof, broken windows following apartment building fire

    A collapsed roof and broken windows can be seen following an apartment building fire in Largo, Md., on July 2, 2024.
    (WTOP/Luke Lukert)

    WTOP/Luke Lukert

    Two people are dead and a child is in critical condition following an apartment building fire in Prince George’s County, Maryland, Tuesday morning.

    The Prince George’s Fire and Rescue Department said first-responders arrived on Harry S. Truman Drive at the Northampton Apartment Homes in Largo, after receiving a call just after 3:45 a.m.

    When crews arrived at the scene, part of a stairwell collapsed, and flames could be seen coming through the top of one of the apartment complexes.

    Fire officials told WTOP that the fire happened on the third level of the apartment building and caused the roof to collapse. Crews were able to put out the fire just before 4:45 a.m.

    The young boy pulled out of the fire remains in “very critical condition.”

    The body of an adult female was found under the rubble after an adult male was declared dead.

    A neighbor told WTOP’s Luke Lukert that the man was a father, but his relationship with the boy has not been verified.

    Damage was mostly contained to the one apartment building, but officials told WTOP that some of the fire extended to nearby buildings.

    A dog that was inside the apartment during the fire was also rescued and resuscitated.

    Lukert reported that smoke continued to smolder hours after flames were extinguished.

    Fire investigators are at the scene. The cause of the fire remains under investigation.

    A map of the area where the fire happened is below.

    WTOP’s Luke Lukert reported from the scene in Largo.

    This story is developing. Stay with WTOP for updates. 

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Jose Umana

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  • Fairfax County family looks to ‘shine the light’ after losing 2 young sons in house fire – WTOP News

    Fairfax County family looks to ‘shine the light’ after losing 2 young sons in house fire – WTOP News

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    When Fairfax County firefighters found two boys inside a fiery Virginia house earlier this month, a 6-year-old boy was shielding his younger brother from the flames. Both boys were pulled from the fire and died days later, but their father says that heroic story has given the family faith.

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    Family looks to ‘shine the light’ after losing 2 young sons in house fire

    When Fairfax County firefighters found two boys inside a fiery Virginia house earlier this month, 6-year-old William was shielding his younger brother, 3-year-old Zachariah, from the flames. Both boys were pulled from the fire and died days later, but their father says that heroic story has given the family faith.

    Jamey Brice, the boys’ father, said firefighters who rescued his kids told him the only thing they could see through the flames and smoke in the Clifton house were the two boys huddled close together.

    “Firefighters came in and talked to us and they described … how they saw William protecting Zachariah, how moved they were by the whole thing, and that they had the courage to come tell us,” Brice said. “We’re so grateful for that.”

    The fire on April 10 sent five people to the hospital, including Brice’s two youngest sons.

    They died on April 14, Brice said.

    Brice’s parents and another one of his sons, 8-year-old Logan, were also inside the home when it caught fire. Those three were able to get out and are expected to survive.

    Questions still remain about what happened.

    “It was just a weird, freakish fire that we still don’t know what the cause was, or how it started or why it grew so fast,” Brice said.

    Zachariah, 3, and William, 6, were killed in a Clifton house fire on April 10.
    (Courtesy Jamey Brice)

    Courtesy Jamey Brice

    Zachariah and William Brice
    Jamey Brice, the boys’ father, said their organs are being donated.
    (Courtesy Jamey Brice)

    Courtesy Jamey Brice

    The Brice family hopes to write a book to share the boys’ story.
    (Courtesy Jamey Brice)

    Courtesy Jamey Brice

    Heroism on all fronts

    “All four boys are a hero in the story,” Brice said of his children.

    Logan called 911 after getting out of the flaming home, which Brice said contributed to a fast response from Fairfax County Fire and Rescue.

    Both parents were at work when the fire broke out.

    Their 13-year-old son Seth alerted them that a friend had texted him about a fire at his house — and the parents were able to quickly race home.

    It was later the family learned how William had tried to protect his little brother.

    Now, both William and Zachariah are donating their organs, which their father called yet one more act of heroism.

    “Zachariah always followed William wherever he went,” Brice said. “William led the way down the hallway first, but then knowing that Zachariah is right behind him.”

    The boys were able to be together during their surgeries, which Brice said has been a successful process of donating the organs so far.

    Brice said the couple is hoping to meet the families of those who received the donated organs in the future. Among the organs that were able to be donated — both boys’ hearts.

    “The idea that those two big hearts of love and joy are … going to hopefully live on in somebody else we know is going to be a total blessing,” he said.

    “But at the same time somebody’s going to be buying a lot of chicken nuggets because William liked chicken nuggets,” he joked. “That’s about all he ate.”

    ‘William’s not here’: Healing from loss

    In the days after the fire, while the boys remained hospitalized in critical condition, the family gained support from people around the U.S. who hoped the boys would miraculously survive.

    Support from the family’s church, along with other churches, the community and even strangers, was moving, Brice said.

    “They did such an amazing job, that we could focus on the kids,” he said, adding that supporters carried the family though.

    Brice said “excellent care” from medical staff helped buy them time with the boys.

    “We’re getting extra snuggles, we got to give them a bath, we got to get like their handprint,” he said.

    After tests determined the boys were brain-dead, Brice said around 20 family members gathered and shared a different memory of the brothers.

    While mourning the loss of the boys, along with their “many goals and dreams,” Brice said the family has been able to find peace, too.

    “They don’t have to deal with all the things of this world that could like harm them,” Brice said. “All of a sudden, we got like, a peace at the same time.”

    The couple has turned to their faith.

    “If we didn’t have this faith, if we didn’t have this community … our mental health would not be in a good spot,” he said.

    Meanwhile, Brice said his parents are suffering from “survivor’s guilt,” having made it out of the fire.

    “They desperately were trying to go back in and get them but the fire … forced them all out of the house,” Brice said.

    Logan is missing his best friend. That comes out at times, Brice said, including Tuesday when the boys normally would have been heading to taekwondo practice together.

    “William and I were gonna both be black belts. But now, William’s not here,” Logan told his father, as Brice recalled.

    ‘Shine the light back’: Celebrating their lives

    Brice said he and his wife want to write a book and make a YouTube channel to share their experience.

    “We’re going to make sure people know their story,” he said.

    A memorial service will be held at the Word of Life Church in Springfield, Virginia, on Saturday at 4 p.m. Brice is calling the event a “party” to celebrate the boys.

    Attendees are being encouraged to wear the boys’ favorite colors, green for William and blue for Zachariah.

    Brice said people can also come dressed as superheroes or in jerseys — William wanted to play in the NFL.

    “We feel like we were hit by the darkness and we just want to shine the light back,” Brice said. “The best way to do that is just to be an example of faith.”

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Jessica Kronzer

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  • ‘We are devastated’: 2 young brothers die days after Fairfax Co. house fire – WTOP News

    ‘We are devastated’: 2 young brothers die days after Fairfax Co. house fire – WTOP News

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    Two young brothers have died days after a fire broke out at their house in Fairfax County, Virginia, the children’s father said Monday.

    Two boys have died after being pulled from their flaming home in the 13900 block of Whetstone Manor Court in Clifton, Virginia, on April 10, according to their father.(Courtesy Fairfax County Fire and Rescue)

    Two young brothers have died days after a fire broke out at their house in Fairfax County, Virginia, the children’s father said Monday.

    “We are devastated by these horrific events and heart broken that we lost our amazing sons,” Jamey Brice, their father, wrote in a Facebook post.

    Last Wednesday, a house fire in Clifton sent five people to the hospital, including Brice’s two young sons, 3-year-old Zachariah and 6-year-old William.

    The boys died on Sunday, Brice said in the Facebook post.

    In the days since the fire, Brice shared updates about the condition of his sons on Facebook and asked for prayers; those posts were viewed by thousands of people.

    On Saturday night, he posted a video alongside his wife, saying the boys were receiving extensive brain tests and both “did not show any signs of responsiveness.”

    The family is asking for privacy.

    “Please continue praying and give us the space we need this week to make some very difficult decisions,” Brice said Monday. “We will keep everyone updated with plans after those decisions are made. We appreciate all the support, but we just need some time to be mom and dad.”

    A GoFundMe page raising funds for the family as they recover from the house fire has surpassed its goal of $150,000.

    Deadly fire’s cause under investigation

    Fairfax County Fire and Rescue said Monday the cause and origin of the fire is still being investigated.

    Smoke alarms went off and alerted the people inside of the flames, authorities said.

    Three people inside were able to get out and call 911, according to the department. Firefighters searched for the two boys and rescued them.

    The boys had life-threatening injuries and the other three occupants are expected to survive, authorities said.

    The fire displaced eight people and two pets. Red Cross is assisting the family, according to a news release.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Jessica Kronzer

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  • Heating lamp used to grow marijuana plants for personal use likely sparked deadly Yonkers fire: Police – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Heating lamp used to grow marijuana plants for personal use likely sparked deadly Yonkers fire: Police – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    YONKERS, New York (WABC) — Police have released what they believe was the cause of a deadly fire in Yonkers on Wednesday.

    Officials say an electric heating lamp used to grow marijuana plants was likely what sparked the fire.

    Flames broke out at around 1:30 a.m. on the first floor of the Mona Lisa Cooperative Residence on Bronx River Road.

    The fire quickly burned through the top floors of the six-story building.

    A resident on the fifth-floor was killed. Five others and 14 firefighters were injured.

    Most residents were home and asleep when the fire broke out and were awakened by smoke that forced many in the 95-unit building to flee the apartments via the fire escape.

    One resident says he saw fire officials bring a baby down on the fire escape. He says she had no shoes on.

    Officials say another man was rescued “hanging out a fourth floor window.”

    “We had to get onto a canopy, get a ladder up on the canopy to get up to him,” Chief Joseph Citrone said.

    The fire chief says the location of the building is on an incline, making it harder for crews to put out the flames. He also said the cold weather makes things difficult.

    The fire left over 100 people homeless.

    “I raised my daughter in that building, I’ve been there for almost 10 years, this is a community as you can see, I have no clue what’s going to happen,” Jeanette Guzman said.

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