Seven people missing after fireworks warehouse explosion in California
The explosion occurred Tuesday evening after a fire broke out in a warehouse located in the town of Esparto, in the northern part of the state.
'Seven individuals remain unaccounted for,' California's state firefighting agency said in a statement. 'First responders and investigators are working diligently with the property owner to determine the whereabouts of those individuals.'
The two injured people have been located and are now out of danger, according to authorities.
However, firefighters have still not been able to access the warehouse because the fireworks held inside could still explode.
Esparto Fire Chief Curtis Lawrence called the situation 'very complex and risky.'
'There were, you know, reports of a large debris field of large pieces of shrapnel spread out across a large area,' he told a press conference.
'So we maintained a wide perimeter of a wide berth around this area today into the day, and we kept our responders in a safe location.'
The authorities' cautious response angered some relatives of the victims.
A woman interrupted the press conference and complained she had no information about her boyfriend and two brothers-in-law, who were among the missing.
She accused the firefighters of not 'focusing on the people who are stuck in the warehouse, possibly dead.'
'People have possibly lost their lives because of you guys not doing your job well enough,' the woman, who did not identify herself, said.
Following the accident, several nearby towns announced they would have to cancel their fireworks displays scheduled for Friday, July 4, when America celebrates its Independence Day.
'This type of incident is very rare, as facilities like this are required to not only follow our stringent California pyrotechnic requirements, but also federal explosive storage requirements,' Cal Fire said in its statement.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Arabiya
3 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
Drive-by shooting in Chicago leaves 4 dead and 14 others wounded, police say
Four people have died from gunshot wounds, and 14 others have been hospitalized following a drive-by shooting in Chicago, police said Thursday. At least three were in critical condition. The shooting happened late Wednesday in Chicago's River North neighborhood. Several media outlets said it happened outside a restaurant and lounge that had hosted an album release party for a rapper. Someone opened fire into a crowd standing outside, police said, and the vehicle immediately drove away. No one was in custody, police said. Multiple people were shot Wednesday night in Chicago, police said. No additional details on the shooting were immediately available, including the number of people shot and the exact location. Officer Julio Garcia with the Chicago Police Department said police would release additional updates as they became available. Chris King, a spokesperson for Northwestern Medicine, said the emergency department was evaluating several people injured in the shooting. He could not provide the number of people sent to the hospital or their conditions.


Al Arabiya
10 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
Two dead, 16 injured in tour bus crash in Malaysia
Two people were killed and 16 others injured on Thursday in southern Malaysia after the tour bus they were traveling on collided with two trucks, local media reported. The crash near the town of Ayer Hitam, some 250 kilometres (156 miles) southeast of the capital Kuala Lumpur, was the second serious accident involving a bus in less than a month on the country's perilous roads. It 'involved a tour bus, a Volvo truck and a tanker lorry', Ayer Hitam fire and rescue chief Mohamad Shamin Mohamed Salikin said. 'Rescue personnel found two men trapped inside the bus and confirmed them dead at the scene,' he told the Bernama national news agency. The men were both from Indonesia, he said. Sixteen other passengers including the bus driver were injured and taken to hospital, while 28 others were unhurt. The cause of the crash was not immediately clear, but it came after 15 Malaysian university students died last month in the country's north, when the bus they were traveling on collided with a minivan and overturned. Malaysia has a high rate of traffic accidents, with an average of 18 people killed on the roads each day, according to government figures. Last month's accident has prompted road safety officials to ramp up their bid to enforce the wearing of seatbelts in buses travelling long distances in the Southeast Asian country.


Al Arabiya
10 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
Man Charged With Killing Former Minnesota House Speaker Is Due Back In Court After Delay
The man charged with killing former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband, and wounding a state senator and his wife, returned to federal court Thursday for a hearing that had been postponed. The hearing addressed whether Vance Boelter should remain in custody without bail and affirmed probable cause to proceed with the case. He is not expected to enter a plea until after prosecutors secure a grand jury indictment. A hearing last Friday was postponed after Boelter's lawyer said his client had been sleep-deprived due to harsh conditions in the Sherburne County Jail, making it difficult for them to communicate. Boelter, 57, of Green Isle, wore a padded suicide prevention suit and orange slippers to that hearing. He denied being suicidal. Sherburne County Sheriff Joel Brott rejected Boelter's claims of poor conditions as 'absurd,' saying, 'He is not in a hotel. He's in jail where a person belongs when they commit the heinous crimes he is accused of committing.' Boelter faces separate federal and state cases on murder and attempted murder charges for what Acting US Attorney Joe Thompson has called a 'political assassination' and a 'chilling attack on our democracy.' Federal authorities are proceeding first. Authorities say Hortman and her husband, Mark, were shot to death in their Brooklyn Park home in the early hours of June 14 by a man disguised as a police officer driving a fake squad car. Boelter also allegedly shot and seriously wounded state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette, earlier that morning at their home in nearby Champlin. The Hoffmans are recovering, but Hortman's golden retriever, Gilbert, was seriously injured and had to be euthanized. Boelter surrendered near his home on the night of June 15 after a 40-hour manhunt that authorities called the largest search in Minnesota history. Boelter's lawyer said he had been kept in a suicide prevention suit without undergarments since his first court appearance on June 16, with lights on 24 hours a day, frequent slamming doors, and the smell of feces from the next cell. The judge granted the delay so Boelter could be moved to segregation and given a normal jail uniform. Boelter's lawyers have declined to comment on the charges, which could carry the federal death penalty, though Thompson has said no decision has been made on whether to seek it. Minnesota abolished its death penalty in 1911. Prosecutors allege Boelter also stopped at the homes of two other Democratic lawmakers and had a list of dozens of other potential targets, including officials in other states. Friends described Boelter as an evangelical Christian with politically conservative views, but prosecutors have declined to speculate on a motive. President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris attended Hortman's funeral. Gov. Tim Walz eulogized Hortman as 'the most consequential speaker in Minnesota history.' Hortman served as speaker from 2019 until January, then yielded the post to a Republican in a power-sharing deal and became speaker emerita.