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Dead in Cars and Homes: With 42 Killed, Camp Fire Becomes Deadliest in State History

The Camp Fire late Monday had grown to 117,000 acres and is 30 percent contained, Cal Fire officials said

What to Know

  • The Camp Fire in Northern California has torched at least 117,000 acres and is 30 percent contained
  • More than 6,700 structures have been destroyed by the blaze, nearly all of them homes
  • In addition to the 42 people killed in the Camp Fire, two more people were killed in a wildfire in Southern California

Authorities on Monday reported 13 more fatalities from a blaze in Northern California that destroyed a town, bringing the total death toll so far to 42 and making it the deadliest wildfire in recorded state history.

The dead have been found in burned-out cars, in the smoldering ruins of their homes, or next to their vehicles, apparently overcome by smoke and flames before they could jump in behind the wheel and escape.

In some cases, there were only charred fragments of bone, so small that coroner’s investigators used a wire basket to sift and sort them. The search for bodies was continuing.

Hundreds of people were unaccounted for by the sheriff’s reckoning, four days after the so-called Camp Fire swept over Paradise, a town of 27,000, with flames so fierce that authorities brought in a mobile DNA lab and forensic anthropologists to help identify the dead.

The Camp Fire late Monday had grown to 117,000 acres and is 30 percent contained, Cal Fire officials said.

A day before the fire started, PG&E contacted a woman about sparks from its lines on her property in the community of Pulga. On Monday, declared the area surrounding those lines a crime scene.

The statewide death toll from wildfires over the past week has reached 44.

A 1933 blaze in Griffith Park in Los Angeles killed 29 people, and a series of wildfires in Northern California’s wine country last fall killed 44 people.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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