5 victims identified in Queens fire; No working smoke detectors found

Monday, April 24, 2017
Deadly Queens fire under investigation
Dray Clark has the latest on the fire that killed 5 people in Queens. (Photo: Michael Appleton/Office of the Mayor via AP)

QUEENS VILLAGE, Queens -- Authorities have identified the victims of Sunday's house fire in Queens that killed five people, New York City's deadliest fire in two years.

Police said the victims were 2-year-old Chayse Lipford, 10-year-old Rayshawn Matthews, 16-year-old Jada Foxworth, 17-year-old Melody Edwards, and 20-year-old Destiny Dones. Four of them are said to be members of the same extended family, while the fifth is a family friend.

A sixth person, identified by relatives as 46-year-old Maurice Matthews, was able to escape out a second-floor window and was taken to New York Hospital Center of Queens in satisfactory condition.

He is reportedly Rayshawn's father and Chayse's grandfather.

Fire investigators said they have not found any working smoke detectors in the house. They are trying to determine what sparked the fire, but they said that it is not considered suspicious and believed it started on the first floor.

The blaze broke out in a house on 112-16 208th Street in Queens Village just after 2:30 p.m. and also spread to an adjacent home. That home was damaged, but no one was home at the time.

The three-alarm fire took hours to get under control, and the wooden frame of the house burned quickly.

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The flames were so intense that the black smoke drew neighbors from their homes, and the flames could be seen by firefighters before they arrived, leading them to call in extra crews.

They struggled to reach some of the victims who were as high up as the attic, a "super-human" task for firefighters to reach people in a home engulfed by such a massive fire, FDNY Commissioner Daniel Nigro said.

They managed to bring the 2-year-old and someone else from the attic where they had been trapped, he said, but they were too late to save them.

Investigators will closely examine a car parked in a driveway between the two houses that burned, as the fire appears to have started or spread through the car to the two adjacent homes.

Witnesses heard tires pop, which may have been mistaken for an explosion, and Nigro said the preliminary investigation indicates the fire did not start from the car.

"We are just beginning our investigation," Nigro said. "Our fire marshals will determine where the fire started, they'll determine how it started, they'll work with police detectives and we'll come to a conclusion. But we're far from that right now."

Four firefighters suffered minor injuries.

The mother of the 2-year-old victim was away on vacation and left him in the hands of relatives.

"She's a good mother, she was always with her baby," relative Sheener Bailey Briggs said. "And she went for the first time on an airplane, the first time away from her baby and she just found out. Just pray for the family."

The fire was the deadliest in the city since March 2015, when a house fire in Brooklyn killed seven children, all siblings. That fire was touched off by a hot plate.

(The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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