Wildfire death toll may rise further with 4 charred bodies found in apparent migrant camp
SAN DIEGO (AP) – On a day when firefighters methodically beat back several of the wildfires menacing Southern California and thousands of evacuees were allowed home, authorities said they had found at least six bodies burned by the flames.
Border Patrol agents on
routine patrol found four bodies in a wooded area near Barrett Junction, just
east of San Diego and along the Mexican border Oct. 25, agency spokeswoman Gloria
Chavez said. The area is near a major corridor for illegal immigrants who often
walk hours or even days to cross into the United States from Mexico.
Authorities said they
discovered the bodies in the afternoon but did not know how long ago the victims
died.
“They could have been out
there a while,” said Paul Parker, a spokesman for the San Diego County medical
examiner’s office. They were tentatively identified as three men and one woman.
If the fire was responsible
for the deaths -- which authorities said was not immediately certain -- it
would mean seven people have died in the flames that have consumed about 760
square miles and at least 1,800 homes since the weekend.
The area was burned by the
Harris Fire, which straddles the Mexican border. That was the same fire that
claimed the life of 52-year-old Tecate man who refused to leave his house when
the area was evacuated Sunday.
The other two people killed
directly by the wildfires also died in San Diego County, the hardest-hit of
seven counties where fires were burning.
Despite the deaths, there
were hopeful signs. Firefighters took advantage of calmer winds and cooler
temperatures to launch an aerial assault on several stubborn blazes.
Mandatory evacuation orders
were lifted for most residential areas of San Diego and shelters emptied
rapidly. San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders said an evacuation center at Qualcomm
Stadium, which had housed as many as 10,000 people, would close.
President Bush surveyed the
damage in the hard-hit community of Rancho Bernardo, where he draped his armed
around a woman who had lost her home.
“We want the people to know
there’s a better day ahead — that today your life may look dismal, but
tomorrow life’s going to be better,” said Bush, who earlier declared seven
counties a major disaster area, making residents eligible for federal
assistance to help them rebuild.
His visit came just hours
after rescue crews found the bodies of a married couple in the rubble of a
burned home in Escondido. Like the previous death, the pair had been urged to
evacuate.
Neighbors told authorities
they last saw the two around midnight Oct. 22. They were reported missing
sometime after that.
San Diego County sheriff’s
deputies had taken a cursory look around the couple’s home and found no one
inside. When the two did not turn up during the day, a search-and-rescue team
was sent to the site and found one body Wednesday night and a second set of
remains early Thursday.
They were identified as John
Christopher Bain, 58, a mortgage broker, and his wife, Victoria Fox, 55, a
teacher. A relative who did not want to be identified because she was too
distraught to talk to other reporters confirmed the deaths to The Associated
Press, and their names matched property records for the address where they were
found.
Officials have reported 10
deaths connected to the fires; seven died of causes other than flames. At least
40 firefighters and 35 other people have been injured.
In the Los Angeles area,
fire crews worked to tamp out many wildfires, including two that burned 21
homes and were now fully contained. But the focus shifted to flames still
raging in Orange and San Diego counties, particularly in rural areas near the
Mexico border where more evacuation orders were issued.
The total burn area across California
had expanded to more than 487,000 acres — about 761 square miles. Eight
Indian reservations have been damaged, with evacuation centers set up for
tribal members.
San Diego officials said the
number of homes destroyed had risen to at least 1,470, about 400 more than
previously reported. That would bring the number of homes destroyed in the
seven affected counties to at least 1,800.
The Santa Ana winds that had
fueled the flames were all but gone by Thursday, but San Diego County remained
a tinderbox. About 24,000 homes remained threatened, as several major fires
were no more than 30 percent contained in San Diego County and the Lake
Arrowhead mountain resort area east of Los Angeles.
Towns scattered throughout
the county remained on the edge of disaster, including the apple-picking region
around Julian, where dozens of homes burned in 2003. Authorities also evacuated
Jamul, an upscale community of about 6,000 in a hilly region about 20 miles
east of San Diego.
David and Brandy Hradecky,
who defied evacuation orders with their daughters, said a small percentage of
residents stayed in Jamul and worked with firefighters to save their neighbors’
homes.
David Hradecky said he spent
2½ days using his bulldozer to create firebreaks around
seven homes. He said his young daughters even used 5-gallon buckets to put out
hot spots and quench the thirst of farm animals that had been left behind.
“Where are you going to go?
They were evacuating the evacuee places. We know what to do. We took care of
all the people’s houses,” said Brandy Hradecky.
To the north, crews were
battling a 38,000-acre fire in northern San Diego County that was burning on
Palomar Mountain.
Fred Daskoski, a spokesman
for the state fire department, said there was no immediate threat to the
mountain’s landmark observatory, which housed the world’s largest telescope
when it was completed in 1908.
In the Lake Arrowhead area,
fire officials said 16,000 homes remained in the path of two wildfires that had
destroyed more than 300 homes.
Both fires remained out of
control, but were being bombarded by aerial tankers and helicopters.
A 26,000-acre blaze in
Orange County has been declared arson. Five people in San Diego, San Bernardino
and Los Angeles counties have been arrested on suspicion of arson, but none has
been linked to any of the major blazes, authorities said Thursday.
A sixth man, Russell Lane
Daves, 27, of Topock, Ariz., was shot to death by San Bernardino police Tuesday
after he fled officers who approached to see if he might be trying to set a
fire.
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Associated Press writers
Allison Hoffman in San Diego, Martha Mendoza in Running Springs; Scott Lindlaw
in Julian; Gillian Flaccus in Jamul; and Thomas Watkins, Jacob Adelman, Chelsea
J. Carter and Jeremiah Marquez in Los Angeles contributed to this report.