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A powerful gas explosion damaged a building in Paris’ Left Bank on Wednesday, injuring more than two dozen people and sparking a large fire, authorities said.
There were a total of 37 people injured, French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin said on France’s national BFM TV network. Four people were in “absolute emergency” and 33 were “relatively injured.”
Two people are still missing, and the rubble of the damaged building is being searched, Darmanin said. There were 320 firefighters and 200 policemen on site.
“We still don’t know the origin of the explosion,” Darmanin said.
Police and a national government minister quickly urged people to avoid the area.
ABDULMONAM EASSA/AFP via Getty Images
Fire officials did not immediately confirm the district mayor’s statement that the explosion was caused by a gas leak, but witnesses reported smelling gas in the area before the blast.
Witnesses told BFM and other outlets the blast had seriously damaged a building housing the Paris American Academy language school. BFM said it was unclear whether the initial blast had struck the academy or a neighboring building. Officials told CBS News that the blast had “weakened” neighboring buildings.
“Because it was a Wednesday afternoon, the children were not in class, which most probably avoided more casualties,” Darmanin said on BFM.
About 20 families who lived in the building or in two neighboring buildings will be rehoused, officials told Le Parisien, a French daily newspaper.
ANTONY PAONE/REUTERS
French news outlets said multiple buildings in the vicinity caught on fire after the explosion. Images from the scene showed firefighters appearing to have control of the blaze.
The Paris public prosecutor’s office and local services have mobilized victim support associations, officials said.
Laure Beccuau, a Paris public prosecutor, told the Agence France-Presse that a legal investigation into the explosion was underway.
“An investigation is now underway, as part of legal investigation that has been opened on the following charges: unintentional injury with the aggravating circumstance of deliberately endangering the lives of others,” Beccuau said. “I would stress that this charge was chosen because we felt it was the most appropriate on the basis of the evidence available at the time. There is nothing to prevent this classification from evolving, even if we have initial elements that lead us to confirm that this explosion originated in the building.”
The U.S. State Department was not aware of any American citizens injured or killed in the explosion, a State Department spokesperson said.
The American embassy in France issued a security alert advising U.S. citizens to avoid the area.
While speaking at an annual music festival in Paris, President Emmanuel Macron asked for a moment to think of “those who were injured” in the explosion, and the families of the victims.
“I want to say a word for all the victims, the families, who live in anguish and difficulty at a time when the toll is not stabilized,” he said.
This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.
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At least two people were injured in an explosion at a minor league baseball stadium in the Southern California city of Lake Elsinore Friday afternoon, about three hours prior to a scheduled game.
At about 4:20 p.m. local time, firefighters responded to a report of a gas leak at Lake Elsinore Diamond stadium to find two people hurt, according to the Cal Fire/Riverside County Fire Department.
The two were taken to a local hospital with moderate injuries, the fire department said. They were not immediately identified.
The stadium is home to the Lake Elsinore Storm, a Single-A affiliate of the San Diego Padres. A Lake Elsinore city spokesperson told CBS Los Angeles that the explosion was reported in the home team’s locker room area.
After the explosion, aerial footage from CBSLA showed players on the field appearing to still be warming up.
However, the stadium was evacuated, the city spokesperson said, and surrounding roads were closed.
The Storm had been scheduled to host the Inland Empire 66ers, with first pitch scheduled for 7:15 p.m. The team later announced that both Friday and Saturday’s games against the 66ers had been postponed due to the incident.
No further details were immediately provided on the exact cause and circumstances of the explosion.
Lake Elsinore is located about 70 miles southeast of Los Angeles.
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Russia’s top investigative agency on Saturday said the suspect in a car bombing that injured a prominent pro-Kremlin novelist and killed his driver has admitted acting at the behest of Ukraine’s special services.
The blast that hit the car of Zakhar Prilepin, a well-known nationalist writer and an ardent supporter of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, was the third explosion involving prominent pro-Kremlin figures since the start of the conflict.
It took place in the region of Nizhny Novgorod, about 250 miles east of Moscow. Prilepin was hospitalized with broken bones, bruised lungs and other injuries; the regional governor said he had been put into a “medical sleep,” but did not elaborate.
Russian Investigative Committee via AP
Russia’s Investigative Committee said the suspect was a Ukrainian native and had admitted under questioning that he was working under orders from Ukraine.
The Foreign Ministry in turn blamed not only Ukraine, but the United States as well.
“Responsibility for this and other terrorist acts lies not only with the Ukrainian authorities, but with their Western patrons, in the first place, the United States, who since the coup d’etat of February 2014 have painstakingly nurtured the anti-Russian neo-Nazi project in Ukraine,” the ministry said, referring to the 2014 uprising in Kyiv that forced the Russia-friendly president to flee.
In August 2022, a car bombing on the outskirts of Moscow killed Daria Dugina, the daughter of an influential Russian political theorist often referred to as “Putin’s brain.” The authorities alleged that Ukraine was behind the blast.
Last month, an explosion in a cafe in St. Petersburg killed a popular military blogger, Vladlen Tatarsky. Officials once again blamed Ukrainian intelligence agencies.
Russian news outlet RBC reported, citing unnamed sources, said that Prilepin was traveling back to Moscow on Saturday from Ukraine’s partially occupied Donetsk and Luhansk regions and stopped in the Nizhny Novogorod region for a meal.
Prilepin became a supporter of Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2014, after Putin illegally annexed the Crimean peninsula. He was involved in the conflict in eastern Ukraine on the side of Russian-backed separatists. Last year, he was sanctioned by the European Union for his support of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
In 2020, he founded a political party, For the Truth, which Russian media reported was backed by the Kremlin. A year later, Prilepin’s party merged with the nationalist A Just Russia party that has seats in the parliament.
A co-chair of the newly formed party, Prilepin won a seat in the State Duma, Russia’s lower house of parliament, in the 2021 election, but gave it up.
Party leader Sergei Mironov called the incident on Saturday “a terrorist act” and blamed Ukraine. Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova echoed Mironov’s sentiment in a post on the messaging app Telegram, adding that responsibility also lay with the U.S. and NATO.
“Washington and NATO have nursed yet another international terrorist cell — the Kyiv regime,” Zakharova wrote. “Direct responsibility of the U.S. and Britain. We’re praying for Zakhar.”
The deputy chair of Russia’s Security Council, former President Dmitry Medvedev put the blame on “Nazi extremists” in a telegram he sent to Prilepin.
Ukrainian officials haven’t commented directly on the allegations. However, Ukraine’s presidential adviser, Mykhailo Podolyak, in a tweet on Saturday, appeared to point the finger at the Kremlin, saying that “to prolong the agony of Putin’s clan and maintain the illusionary ‘total control,’ the Russian repression machine picks up the pace and catches up with everyone,” including supporters of the Ukraine war.
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A worker is missing after a “violent explosion” at a chemical facility in Massachusetts early Thursday morning, CBS Boston reported.
Firefighters were called to Seqens, a pharmaceutical manufacturing company in Newburyport, at about 12:45 a.m., the fire department said. When they arrived, they found an industrial-sized vat that had been inside the building was now about 30 feet away in a parking lot.
The fire department said there were five workers in the building at the time of the explosion. Four were taken to a hospital, treated and released. The fifth worker has not been found yet.
“We’re still searching for him,” Newburyport Fire Chief Steve Bradbury said at a news conference, adding that they’re “in a recovery mode.”
CBS Boston
The explosion, which Bradbury called “violent,” caused major structural damage to the building so firefighters and technical rescue crews haven’t been able to go inside. The Coast Guard sent in their helicopter to help in the search but did not find anything.
“We need to make sure it’s safe for us to continue our search in a particular area that we want to take a look at,” the chief told reporters. “It’s going to be very methodical in nature for the protection of all the workers, the emergency workers that are here right now.”
Authorities said there’s no danger to people who live in the area. There’s no word yet on what caused the explosion.
This isn’t the first fire at this facility. Three years ago, there were six explosions that tore through the roof of the building. No one was hurt in that incident. The deputy fire chief at the time said the roof is designed to blow open to relieve any pressure that builds up. At the time, the company believed it was a mechanical issue from a steam line that caused those explosions.
According to the company’s website, Seqens has more than two decades of experience in chemical manufacturing and has two locations in Massachusetts.
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Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida was evacuated from a port in Wakayama after a blast was heard, but he was unharmed in the incident, local media reported Saturday.
Several reports, including by Kyodo news agency, said an apparent “smoke bomb” had been thrown but there were no immediate signs of injuries or damage at the scene.
Cell phone video from the scene captured the chaos as the crowd scattered after the sound of the blast.
A person was detained at the site in western Japan’s Wakayama, where Kishida had been due to give a speech, national broadcaster NHK and others said. NHK showed footage of security and police detaining an individual.
Kishida had just finished sampling fish at the site and was about to deliver remarks to a crowd in support of a ruling party candidate in upcoming lower house by-elections when the incident occurred.
“That something like this happened in the middle of an election campaign that constitutes the foundation of democracy is regrettable. It’s an unforgivable atrocity,” Hiroshi Moriyama, the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP)’s election strategy chairman, told NHK.
The person detained was arrested on suspicion of obstruction of business, the broadcaster said.
There was no immediate official confirmation of the incident, with local police declining to comment.
Last July, former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was fatally shot while giving an outdoor speech in the western Japanese city of Nara. Police arrested the suspect at the scene, and he was later charged with murder.
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An explosion tore through a cafe in Russia’s second-largest city on Sunday, killing a prominent military blogger who supported Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Russia’s Interior Ministry said more than a dozen people were wounded.
Russian news reports said blogger Vladlen Tatarsky was killed and 16 people were hurt in the explosion at the Street Food Bar No. 1 cafe in St. Petersburg. The reports did not mention any claim of responsibility or provide details beyond saying that a cafe visitor carried an “explosive device.”
The Interior Ministry said everyone at the cafe at the time of the blast was being “checked for involvement.”
Russian media and military bloggers said Tatarsky was meeting with members of the public and that a woman presented him with a box containing a statuette that apparently exploded. A Russian group that organized the event said it had taken security precautions, but added that “regrettably, they proved insufficient.”
Since the fighting in Ukraine began on Feb. 24, 2022, various fires and explosions have occurred in Russia without any clear connection to the conflict.
Tatarsky had filed regular reports from Ukraine as well as the Kremlin. Tatarsky is the pen name for Maxim Fomin, who had accumulated more than 560,000 followers on his Telegram messaging app channel. He was known for his blustery pronouncements and ardent pro-war rhetoric.
After the Kremlin’s annexation of four regions of Ukraine last year, Tatarsky posted a video in which he vowed: “That’s it. We’ll defeat everybody, kill everybody, rob everybody we need to. It will all be the way we like it. God be with you.”
Many countries have condemned the annexation as illegal.
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At least one person was killed and more than 10 others injured when an explosion at a metal plant in Ohio sparked a large fire.
A 46-year-old man died in the incident, according to records from the Cuyahoga County Medical Examiner’s Office. An exact cause of death was not given, but the location of the man’s death was listed as the address for the plant.
Emergency crews were called to the I. Schumann & Co. copper alloy company in the Cleveland suburb of Oakwood Village shortly before 3 p.m. Monday. The blast shook the ground and scattered debris for a couple of hundred yards, damaging several vehicles, while the fire sent smoke billowing to the sky in a cloud visible for miles.
Oakwood Fire Captain Brian DiRocco told reporters that 13 people were transferred to several area hospitals and another patient was still being examined. One person had to be pulled from the debris and was being treated while being taken to a hospital by helicopter. At least one patient was critical, and a number of people had burn injuries, but all plant staff had been accounted for and the fire was under control with crews mopping up hot spots, DiRocco.
It was not immediately clear if the man who died was among those who had been hospitalized or if he died at the scene.
“An explosion of unknown origin struck our Bedford, Ohio, facility today resulting in injuries to employees and significant damage to the facility,” I. Schumann & Co. said in a statement, according to CBS affiliate WOIO-TV. “Our efforts now are focused on supporting the first responders who came on scene quickly to help our employees.”
An employee at Rose Colored Gaming, located across the street from the plant, told WOIO that debris from the blast damaged several cars and parts of the building structure.
Aaron Josefczyk / REUTERS
“That other beam flew across the street and blew out our window over here. Knocked this guy’s car down,” the man said. “Horrible. Exciting, but horrible.”
He told the station that he saw “a plume of smoke and then the bigger explosion and then the wall of flame. And then it was on fire. It was just, it was on fire.”
I. Schumann & Co. “recycles and trades a wide variety of scrap and produces brass and bronze alloys in ingot and pellet forms,” the company said on its website.
MetroHealth spokesperson Dorsena Koonce said several people were brought to the hospital and were being treated, but there was no immediate word on how many or their conditions. A University Hospitals official said seven patients were being treated at Ahuja Medical Center but there was no word on their conditions.
The plant has been cited by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration for multiple violations in recent years, according to WOIO.
In one 2019 incident, an employee suffered third-degree burns and was hospitalized after molten metal splashed on his coveralls and he didn’t realize his clothing had caught fire. He was not wearing fire-resistant clothing, WOIO reported.
In July of last year, the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency sent the company a notice for 11 violations, including unlawful storage and disposal of hazardous waste, WOIO reported.
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A World War II bomb that was found in Great Yarmouth, England exploded on Friday in what authorities are calling an “unplanned” detonation.
Officials first became aware of the 250 kilogram (about 550 pounds) explosive on Tuesday, Feb. 7, when a contractor who was doing dredging work in the River Yare discovered it, according to a news release from the city. Emergency services and local authorities declared a “major incident” and activated emergency plans. An Explosion Ordnance Device team was also summoned to the area. Roads were closed and the immediate area was evacuated.
On Friday, work began to disarm the explosives remaining in the device, but somehow it detonated, causing a large explosion that was captured on video by a police drone. The video was shared on Twitter.
In a news release, officials said that a protective sandbox had been built around the bomb in case of an unexpected detonation. That sandbox prevented injuries, and on Twitter, officials said that “no one was injured” in the day’s events.
Evacuation orders have been lifted and Great Yarmouth Borough Council Chief Executive Sheila Oxtoby thanked community members for their patience and understanding throughout the multi-day process.
“This has been an unsettling time for many people, most of all for those who were evacuated from their homes. Safety of the public has been at the heart of decision making throughout this multi-agency operation. While it may have been slow, yesterday afternoon’s events show why it was so important to take all necessary measures to minimize any risk to the public,” Oxtoby said, according to the news release. “… I’d like to thank everyone involved for bringing this to a safe conclusion and we will continue to help those residents displaced.”
It’s not clear how many people were displaced due to the explosion.
Officials said that a nearby tower crane seen in the drone video has been deemed “safe.” Environment Agency engineers will inspect a river wall today that was damaged in the explosion, but “initial assessments show” that the flood defense it provides has not been compromised.
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Muhammad Sajjad/AP
Peshawar, Pakistan — A suicide bomber struck on Monday inside a mosque in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar, reportedly killing at least 20 people and wounding scores more, officials said. The bomber detonated his suicide vest as worshipers — including many policemen from nearby police offices — were praying inside.
The impact of the explosion collapsed the roof of the mosque, which caved in and injured many, according to Zafar Khan, a local police officer.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the bombing in Peshawar, the capital of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province bordering Afghanistan, but as CBS News’ Sami Yousafzai reports, the Tehreek-e-Taliban-e-Pakistan terror group, the Pakistani Taliban commonly known by the abbreviation TTP, recently broke off peace talks with the country’s government and relaunched military operations against state security forces.
The Pakistani group is believed to have gained strength over the last couple years, since the Afghan Taliban retook control of the neighboring country in August 2021. The TTP are a separate group to the Afghan Taliban, but they are close allies.
The Pakistani group has waged an insurgency in Pakistan for 15 years, fighting for stricter enforcement of Islamic laws in the country, the release of their members who are in government custody and a reduction of Pakistani military presence in the country’s former tribal regions.
Muhammad Sajjad/AP
A Pakistani security officer who spoke to CBS News on the condition of anonymity said the country’s armed forces had made significant strides against the TTP but that the group had managed to regain operational strength by operating across the Afghan border, enabling it to “start attacking soft targets in Pakistan.”
The official said TTP leaders were orchestrating attacks inside Pakistan from Afghan soil, and said it was the “duty and responsibility” of the Afghan Taliban regime ruling the neighboring nation to prevent such operations.
A survivor of Monday’s attack, 38-year-old police officer Meena Gul, said he was inside the mosque when the bomb went off. He said he didn’t know how he survived unhurt. He could hear cries and screams after the bomb exploded, he said. There were more than 150 worshippers inside the mosque when the bomb went off, Gul added.
Khan, the police officer, said rescuers were trying to get the wounded to a nearby hospital. He said several of the wounded were in critical condition at a hospital and there were fears the death toll would rise.
Another local police officer, Aftab Khan, told CBS News he was preparing to go to the mosque to pray when he heard the “huge blast.”
“Due to security threats and fears of Taliban attack, police were on high alert,” he said, “but this tragic attack took the lives of many police and civilians.”
Pakistan’s DAWN TV network quoted Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif as condemning the attack and lambasting the attackers as having “nothing to do with Islam.”
“Terrorists want to create fear by targeting those who perform the duty of defending Pakistan,” he said, alluding to the high number of security forces who use the mosque. “The entire nation is standing united against the menace of terrorism.”
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A man who police say planted three explosives inside a Jehovah’s Witness worship hall before killing his wife and himself on Christmas Day is suspected of bombing a union building earlier in the day.
The explosives that Enoch Apodaca, 46, allegedly planted at the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witnesses in suburban Denver, Colorado, all failed to detonate. But shortly before he went to the hall, Apodaca went to the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 68 building, which police called his “place of business,” where he was seen entering the building with a bucket at around 8:45 a.m. Shortly after he left, there was a “large explosion,” police said.
The building was closed at the time and no one was hurt. Police said that the explosive devices used at Kingdom Hall match the one planted at the electrical workers’ building.
Police were called to Kingdom Hall at around 9:00 a.m., officials said, after a structure fire and shooting were reported. Investigators found that Apodaca had directed his wife, Melissa Martinez, to back a black Dodge truck up to a window of the building. Apodaca broke the window with a hammer, placed the explosives, and then approached his wife from behind with a shotgun. He shot her in the back of the head, then shot himself, police said.
There were two other people in the hall at the time, but they were not injured, police said. One person used a fire extinguisher to put out a fire that began near one of the failed explosives.
Investigators found that the couple had been previous members of the Kingdom Hall congregation, but were “no longer welcomed.” Apodaca had reached out to another member of the church expressing an interest in returning, but was directed to speak with Kingdom Hall elders. Police said both acts on Dec. 25 appeared to “be a result of personal issues Enoch had with his employer, and the couples’ own issues with Kingdom Hall.”
CBS
Just over a year before the explosions and shooting, a representative of Apodaca’s former employer said that he had told a Local 68 union representative that he would shoot his wife and the union representative after he and his wife lost their jobs, according to The Associated Press.
Apodaca also reportedly told the representative that he would “come after the people responsible” for him and his wife both losing their jobs, AP reported. According to an application for a protection order against Apodaca filed in December 2021, Apodaca had been fired in June of that same year, but the application didn’t say why, AP reported. It’s not clear under what circumstances Martinez lost her job.
Police said that investigators found no further explosives at the couple’s homes, but did find “numerous items consistent with the manufacturing of explosives similar to those found in Kingdom Hall.”
Personal belongings had also been set out and marked for individual family members.
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A 70-year-old Marine veteran risked his own life Tuesday afternoon while answering pleas for help after a rowhome exploded in Pigtown.Terry Bagley just happened to be walking by when the house exploded shortly after 2 p.m. on Bayard Street. Perhaps it was his marine training or maybe it was his kind heart that prompted him to jump into action.Baltimore firefighters pulled him from the rubble after he risked his own life to save a teenager and a woman from the burning building.Baltimore fire officials provided an update Wednesday afternoon, saying a 16-year-old girl and a 48-year-old woman who were in the house that exploded are in stable condition, and Bagley is in critical condition.He is a married father of five who works housekeeping at the Veterans Affairs hospital. His children, daughter Eris Bagley and son Terry Bagley Jr., told 11 News they are proud but also worried about their father, who’s in a medically induced coma at Shock Trauma.”My father has suffered a broken pelvis, a broken femur. He’s going in for surgery and a broken hand,” Eris Bagley said. “He thought nothing about his own life to save two women that he did not know.”The family said doctors want to perform surgery on one of his injuries but are waiting for a heart specialist’s opinion first.”It was a brave thing for him to do, especially at his age being 70 years old,” Terry Bagley Jr. said. “When I see him looking, sometimes, lifeless, it scares me because I don’t know if he hears me when I’m talking, and I see some action with his fingers moving and stuff like that. But at the end of the day, I’m still scared because anything could go wrong.”According to family, Terry Bagley was on his way to a market to buy items for the Thanksgiving meal when he came across the emergency and jumped into action.Video below: Residents, witnesses describe Pigtown rowhome explosionWhen asked why she thought her father did that, Eris Bagley told 11 News: “Because he’s a Marine.””My dad endured polio as a child. He also endured the thing with Camp Lejeune with toxic water and he also served in the Vietnam War,” she said. “(He was) heroic, but I wish he didn’t do it because now I’m scared that I am about to lose him. But I’m glad he did it to save people he didn’t know.”Neighbors had been complaining of a strong odor of natural gas days prior to the explosion. According to Baltimore Gas and Electric and fire officials, the cause of the explosion remains under investigation.BGE also said they will continue to canvass the area to ensure the safe and reliable operation of our gas infrastructure. Video below: SkyTeam 11 surveys the damage in PigtownThe blast destroyed one home and damaged several others. BGE has since turned gas and electric service back on to other homes on the block.Meanwhile, the Bagley family is holding vigil at the hospital.”I’m praying. I’m praying to God, and I’m asking him to protect him and I’m asking God to spare his life,” Terry Bagley Jr. said.Concerned about mounting medical bills, the family set up a GoFundMe page.
A 70-year-old Marine veteran risked his own life Tuesday afternoon while answering pleas for help after a rowhome exploded in Pigtown.
Terry Bagley just happened to be walking by when the house exploded shortly after 2 p.m. on Bayard Street. Perhaps it was his marine training or maybe it was his kind heart that prompted him to jump into action.
Baltimore firefighters pulled him from the rubble after he risked his own life to save a teenager and a woman from the burning building.
Baltimore fire officials provided an update Wednesday afternoon, saying a 16-year-old girl and a 48-year-old woman who were in the house that exploded are in stable condition, and Bagley is in critical condition.
He is a married father of five who works housekeeping at the Veterans Affairs hospital. His children, daughter Eris Bagley and son Terry Bagley Jr., told 11 News they are proud but also worried about their father, who’s in a medically induced coma at Shock Trauma.
“My father has suffered a broken pelvis, a broken femur. He’s going in for surgery and a broken hand,” Eris Bagley said. “He thought nothing about his own life to save two women that he did not know.”
The family said doctors want to perform surgery on one of his injuries but are waiting for a heart specialist’s opinion first.
“It was a brave thing for him to do, especially at his age being 70 years old,” Terry Bagley Jr. said. “When I see him looking, sometimes, lifeless, it scares me because I don’t know if he hears me when I’m talking, and I see some action with his fingers moving and stuff like that. But at the end of the day, I’m still scared because anything could go wrong.”
According to family, Terry Bagley was on his way to a market to buy items for the Thanksgiving meal when he came across the emergency and jumped into action.
Video below: Residents, witnesses describe Pigtown rowhome explosion
When asked why she thought her father did that, Eris Bagley told 11 News: “Because he’s a Marine.”
“My dad endured polio as a child. He also endured the thing with Camp Lejeune with toxic water and he also served in the Vietnam War,” she said. “(He was) heroic, but I wish he didn’t do it because now I’m scared that I am about to lose him. But I’m glad he did it to save people he didn’t know.”
Neighbors had been complaining of a strong odor of natural gas days prior to the explosion. According to Baltimore Gas and Electric and fire officials, the cause of the explosion remains under investigation.
BGE also said they will continue to canvass the area to ensure the safe and reliable operation of our gas infrastructure.
Video below: SkyTeam 11 surveys the damage in Pigtown
The blast destroyed one home and damaged several others. BGE has since turned gas and electric service back on to other homes on the block.
Meanwhile, the Bagley family is holding vigil at the hospital.
“I’m praying. I’m praying to God, and I’m asking him to protect him and I’m asking God to spare his life,” Terry Bagley Jr. said.
Concerned about mounting medical bills, the family set up a GoFundMe page.
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MENAHEM KAHANA/AFP/Getty
Jerusalem — Two blasts went off near bus stops in Jerusalem on Wednesday, killing one person and injuring at least 14, in what police said were suspected attacks by Palestinians. The first explosion occurred near a bus stop on the edge of the city, where commuters usually crowd waiting for buses. The second went off in Ramot, a settlement in the city’s north.
Police said one person died from the wounds and Israel’s rescue service Magen David Adom said four people were seriously wounded in the blasts.
The apparent attacks came as Israeli-Palestinian tensions are high, following months of Israeli raids in the occupied West Bank prompted by a spate of deadly attacks against Israelis that killed 19 people. There has been an uptick in recent weeks in Palestinian attacks.
The violence also comes as former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is holding coalition talks after national elections and is likely to form what’s expected to be Israel’s most right-wing government ever.
Itamar Ben-Gvir, an extremist lawmaker who has called for the death penalty for Palestinian attackers and who is set to become the minister in charge of police under Netanyahu, said the attack meant Israel needed to take a tougher stance on Palestinian attackers.
“We must exact a price from terror,” he said at the scene of the first explosion. “We must return to be in control of Israel, to restore deterrence against terror.”
Police said their initial findings showed that explosive devices were placed at the two sites. The twin blasts occurred amid the buzz of rush hour traffic and police closed part of a main highway leading out of the city, where the fist explosion went off.
Mostafa Alkharouf/Anadolu Agency/Getty
Video from shortly after the first blast showed debris strewn along the sidewalk as the wail of ambulances blared. A bus in Ramot was pocked with what looked like shrapnel marks.
“It was a crazy explosion. There is damage everywhere here,” Yosef Haim Gabay, a medic who was at the scene when the first blast occurred, told Israeli Army Radio. “I saw people with wounds bleeding all over the place.”
While Palestinians have carried out stabbings, car rammings and shootings in recent years, bombing attacks have become very rare since the end of a Palestinian uprising nearly two decades ago.
The Islamic militant Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip and once carried out suicide bombings against Israelis, praised the perpetrators of the attacks, calling it a heroic operation, but stopped short of claiming responsibility.
“The occupation is reaping the price of its crimes and aggression against our people,” Hamas spokesman Abd al-Latif al-Qanua said.
Israel said that in response to the blasts, it was closing two West Bank crossings to Palestinians near the West Bank city of Jenin, a militant stronghold.
More than 130 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli-Palestinian fighting in the West Bank and east Jerusalem this year, making 2022 the deadliest year since 2006. The Israeli army says most of the Palestinians killed have been militants. But stone-throwing youths protesting the military incursions and others not involved in confrontations have also been killed.
At least five more Israelis have been killed in Palestinian attacks in recent weeks.
Israel captured the West Bank in the 1967 Mideast war, along with east Jerusalem and the West Bank. The Palestinians seek the territories for their hoped-for independent state.
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A condo building exploded and caught fire Wednesday morning in Gaithersburg, injuring as many as 12 people, including four children.Montgomery County Fire and Rescue Service spokesman Pete Piringer said a fire and explosion were reported around 8:40 a.m. at the Potomac Oaks condominium complex in the 800 block of Quince Orchard Boulevard. A second alarm was called as heavy fires were discovered upon arrival.”The building has sustained a significant explosion that resulted in a collapse,” Montgomery County Fire Chief Scott Goldstein said. The fire chief said as many as 12 people were injured — 10 were taken to hospitals, two of which were adults taken to a trauma center, four were adults and four were children who suffered “mild to moderate” injuries. Two others were treated at the scene and declined to be taken to a hospital.At 2 p.m., the fire chief said there was still a smoldering fire in the building and that Washington Gas shut off the gas supply to the affected buildings. The fire chief said there were no previous calls to this complex in the past week. The last call for a gas leak was made on Sept. 22.The fire chief said all of the occupants of 828 have been accounted for and contacted. There remains one unit in 826 for which officials have yet to make contact with the occupant.The chief said it’s too early to determine a cause or what contributed to the incident.Residents repeatedly told 11 News the incident “felt like a shockwave.””It was bad, just bad,” said Lilian Mendez, a resident who was among the witnesses who described feeling the explosion and fire.”It was really loud at one time. So, it was like when they drop a dumpster. That’s what it sounded like. But you could feel it like a tractor-trailer came through, that’s what it felt like. Like, it was just a parade of tractor-trailers, that’s what I felt. I didn’t know what was going on,” said Genee Willis, a witness. “It felt like a bomb. I mean, you actually felt a shockwave. It wasn’t just, you know, something was suddenly on fire and you heard a boom. You could feel it when it happened. It was, it was just crazy.”Firefighters evacuated neighboring buildings after the collapse, and the Red Cross is assisting displaced residents, Goldstein said. The Red Cross issued a statement, saying its trained volunteers are providing essential services that include food, water, financial resources, emotional support and the replacement of medications, according to need.Video below: 2 p.m. news conference from Montgomery CountyMore than 100 firefighters and rescue personnel responded to the scene.Gov. Larry Hogan tweeted shortly before 11 a.m., saying: “The State Fire Marshal and the Maryland State Police Rockville Barrack have offered assistance with the response to this explosion.”U.S. Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Maryland, posted a statement on Facebook, saying: “I’m thinking of everyone impacted by the fire in Gaithersburg and grateful to our first responders on the scene. My office is in close contact with local officials and have offered them — and the families who are impacted — any assistance we can provide.”Video below: LIVE update from 11 News at NoonVideo below: SkyTeam 11 shows the scene
A condo building exploded and caught fire Wednesday morning in Gaithersburg, injuring as many as 12 people, including four children.
Montgomery County Fire and Rescue Service spokesman Pete Piringer said a fire and explosion were reported around 8:40 a.m. at the Potomac Oaks condominium complex in the 800 block of Quince Orchard Boulevard. A second alarm was called as heavy fires were discovered upon arrival.
“The building has sustained a significant explosion that resulted in a collapse,” Montgomery County Fire Chief Scott Goldstein said.
The fire chief said as many as 12 people were injured — 10 were taken to hospitals, two of which were adults taken to a trauma center, four were adults and four were children who suffered “mild to moderate” injuries. Two others were treated at the scene and declined to be taken to a hospital.
At 2 p.m., the fire chief said there was still a smoldering fire in the building and that Washington Gas shut off the gas supply to the affected buildings. The fire chief said there were no previous calls to this complex in the past week. The last call for a gas leak was made on Sept. 22.
The fire chief said all of the occupants of 828 have been accounted for and contacted. There remains one unit in 826 for which officials have yet to make contact with the occupant.
The chief said it’s too early to determine a cause or what contributed to the incident.
Residents repeatedly told 11 News the incident “felt like a shockwave.”
“It was bad, just bad,” said Lilian Mendez, a resident who was among the witnesses who described feeling the explosion and fire.
“It was really loud at one time. So, it was like when they drop a dumpster. That’s what it sounded like. But you could feel it like a tractor-trailer came through, that’s what it felt like. Like, it was just a parade of tractor-trailers, that’s what I felt. I didn’t know what was going on,” said Genee Willis, a witness. “It felt like a bomb. I mean, you actually felt a shockwave. It wasn’t just, you know, something was suddenly on fire and you heard a boom. You could feel it when it happened. It was, it was just crazy.”
Firefighters evacuated neighboring buildings after the collapse, and the Red Cross is assisting displaced residents, Goldstein said. The Red Cross issued a statement, saying its trained volunteers are providing essential services that include food, water, financial resources, emotional support and the replacement of medications, according to need.
Video below: LIVE update from 11 News at Noon
More than 100 firefighters and rescue personnel responded to the scene.
Gov. Larry Hogan tweeted shortly before 11 a.m., saying: “The State Fire Marshal and the Maryland State Police Rockville Barrack have offered assistance with the response to this explosion.”
U.S. Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Maryland, posted a statement on Facebook, saying: “I’m thinking of everyone impacted by the fire in Gaithersburg and grateful to our first responders on the scene. My office is in close contact with local officials and have offered them — and the families who are impacted — any assistance we can provide.”
This story will be updated.
Video below: SkyTeam 11 shows the scene
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