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mitunnelrat
11-12-2012, 01:31 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/deadly-blast-devastates-indianapolis-neighborhood-220044324.html

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Splintered beams and boards on a piece of charred earth were all that remained Sunday where three Indianapolis homes were leveled in a blast that killed two people and rendered homes for blocks uninhabitable.

A backhoe raked through the rubble in the middle-class subdivision as clusters of firefighters and rescue workers weary from a long, chaotic day that began late the night before waited for their next assignment.

The two-story, brick-faced homes on either side of those demolished by the blast were ruins. One home's roof was gone, a blackened husk left behind. On the other side of the gap, the side of a home was sheared off. Across the street, garage doors had buckled from the heat.

It wasn't yet clear what caused the blast that shook the neighborhood at 11 p.m. Saturday. Residents described hearing a loud boom that blew out windows and collapsed ceilings. Some thought a plane had crashed or that it was an earthquake.

Alex Pflanzer, who was asleep when the nearby homes were leveled, said he heard his wife screaming and thought someone was breaking in his house. Grabbing his gun, he checked the house and saw the front door was standing open.

"I walked outside and all the houses were on fire," he said.

Pflanzer, his wife and two dogs were staying in a hotel room Sunday night. They were, however, without their cat, who refused to budge from the crawl space.

Deputy Code Enforcement Director Adam Collins said as many as 31 homes were damaged so badly that they may have to be demolished. The explosion damaged a total of 80 homes, he said. He estimated the damage at $3.6 million.

Some residents were allowed to return to their homes to retrieve a few belongings Sunday under police escort, officials said. Others whose homes weren't as badly damaged were allowed to go home, but officials said they would have to do without electricity overnight.

Officials did not identify the two people who were killed. However, a candlelight vigil was held at Greenwood's Southwest Elementary School on Sunday night for second-grade teacher Jennifer Longworth. She and her husband, John Dion Longworth, lived at a home destroyed in the blast. WTHR-TV reported that friends, family and colleagues of the teacher gathered at the school.

Deputy Fire Chief Kenny Bacon told reporters Sunday investigators haven't eliminated any possible causes for the blast. But U.S. Rep. Andre Carson, who represents the area, said he had been told a bomb or meth lab explosion had been ruled out.

Bacon said the crisis could have been much worse. "I know we're very fortunate that some of the people weren't home," he said.

Bryan and Trina McClellan were at home with their 23-year-old son, Eric, when the shock wave from the blast a block away shook their home. It knocked out the windows along one side of their house, and their first instinct was to check on their grandchildren, two toddlers who were in the basement. One held his ears and said, "Loud noise, loud noise."

Eric McClellan said he ran to the scene of the explosion and saw homes flat or nearly so.

"Somebody was trapped inside one of the houses, and the firefighters were trying to get to him. I don't know if he survived," he said, adding that firefighters ordered him to leave the area.

Once the flames were out, firefighters went through what was left of the neighborhood, one home at a time, in case people had been left behind, Fire Lt. Bonnie Hensley said. They used search lights until dawn as they peered into the ruined buildings.

Along with the two people killed, seven people were taken to a hospital with injuries, Bacon said. Everyone else was accounted for, he said.

Four of the seven who were injured had minor injuries, fire officials said.

Dan Considine, a spokesman for Citizens Energy, said the utility had not received any calls from people smelling natural gas in that area.

"Most of the time, when there's a gas leak, people smell it," he said. "But not always."

Carson said officials from the National Transportation Safety Board and the federal Department of Transportation, which have oversight over pipelines, were also sending investigators.

Dan Able, a 58-year-old state employee who lives across the street from the two homes that exploded, said his first thought was that a plane had hit his house.

The blast was "a sound I've never heard before, it was so loud," he said. His windows blew out and a bedroom ceiling collapsed on his wife, Jan. He pulled her out, and they went outside.

"Both houses across the street were on fire, basically, just rubble on fire," he said.

The Ables and about 200 other people evacuated from the neighborhood were taken to a nearby school. Some who had been sleeping arrived in their pajamas with pets they scooped up as they fled. Others had to leave their animals behind, and police said later in the day that they were trying to round up those wandering through the area and find their owners.

Most evacuees eventually left the school to stay with relatives, friends or at hotels.

The relief operation was later moved to a church just a few blocks away, where residents could find supplies including blankets, shoes, diapers, canned goods and even a teddy bear.

Seems like a pretty large blast. It'll be interesting to see some updates on this one.

ak474u
11-12-2012, 01:43 AM
Sounds like a gas main, that one in CA that blew up did the same thing. Bet that was a scary thing to experience.

robsdak
11-12-2012, 06:55 AM
the pictures they have on yahoo are bad. 2 houses completely gone and several around are damaged. i have been waiting for updates myself. the my neck of the woods, well Indy as kid.

TroubleShooter
11-12-2012, 02:11 PM
There have been several gas explosions make the news, usually someone has done a repair or hit a line with backhoe or drain cleaner.......

Just a FYI, when I was installing gaslines and plumbing, they required only 18 inches seperation between services, like sewer, electric and gas.....Also if you are digging with backhoe in an area with gas lines , dig both sides , and below where you think the line is or where the line is marked......Once you do that, take your backhoe bucket and drop ontop of the dirt (May require several hits)and it will fall away into the pits you dug , exposing the gasline......

Next , I wonder.....Are these explosions able to be controlled, could someone rent, buy a home in an area with gas service and intentionally cause a explosion. There was a man in Middletown who attempted to level his home by gas stove and candles.....Will search for link.

http://www.pulsejournal.com/news/news/crime-law/arrest-warrant-issued-for-homeowner-in-gas-leak-ca/nNFbb/

Crews were dispatched to the home to investigate a strong smell of natural gas reported by a neighbor. Upon arrival, crews found all doors locked, candles lit, the TV on, and the home’s furnace appeared to have been tampered with, according to authorities. No one was home.

“The suspicious nature of it is what led to this charge,” Muterspaw said. “It’s just one of those things that it was the correct charge and that is what we have been waiting for.”

ak474u
11-20-2012, 04:16 AM
*Update today.... Now being investigated as homicide.


http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/11/19/indiana-home-explosion-now-being-treated-as-homicide-investigation/

mitunnelrat
11-20-2012, 04:31 AM
Wow. I'll have to remember to come back and read that tomorrow. Crazy!

The Stig
11-20-2012, 11:25 AM
Hummm......very interesting indeed.

izzyscout21
11-20-2012, 03:40 PM
**********Not It*************

- - - Updated - - -

just sayin

TroubleShooter
12-25-2012, 04:00 PM
Three arrested........Microwave , NaturalGas and a plan.......

mitunnelrat
12-26-2012, 07:27 PM
Craziness.

That is all.

ak474u
12-26-2012, 09:56 PM
I figured there was funny business when I heard nobody was home, and they had boarded their cat... Who boards a cat? You leave a big bowl of food, clean litter, and a bucket of water.

Sniper-T
12-27-2012, 12:45 PM
^
Um... not necessarily the best idea...

I tried that with a previous cat, about 25 years ago... lots of litter, lots of food, she drank from the toilet, so lots of fresh cold water...

She 'Thanked' me for her imposed solitude by leaving the litter box as clean and fresh as the day I left. The only place she relieved herself, was on my bed, and in particular, my pillows.

What a sweetheart!

ak474u
12-27-2012, 07:02 PM
^
Um... not necessarily the best idea...

I tried that with a previous cat, about 25 years ago... lots of litter, lots of food, she drank from the toilet, so lots of fresh cold water...

She 'Thanked' me for her imposed solitude by leaving the litter box as clean and fresh as the day I left. The only place she relieved herself, was on my bed, and in particular, my pillows.

What a sweetheart!

I'd drop that cat off at a Chinese buffet. Lol

Sniper-T
12-27-2012, 07:30 PM
better. I left it with an ex!