A fire in a three-story apartment building in downtown Las Vegas where residents were apparently using their stoves for heat killed six people and forced some residents to jump from upper-floor windows to escape the heavy smoke before dawn Saturday, authorities said.
Investigators reported that the fire started around a first-floor unitโs stove and that residents had told them that there was no heat in the building, which sits a few blocks from downtown Las Vegasโ touristy Fremont Street District.
Residents reported awakening to pounding on doors around 4 a.m.
By the time Matthew Sykes got his clothes on to flee, one end of his second-floor hallway was choked with thick black smoke, as was a stairwell, making it impassable for he and his wife.
โThe whole place was like one big black cloud of smoke โ couldnโt get down the stairs,โ Sykes told the AP.
Firefighters arriving at the scene began treating injured and using ladders to rescue numerous people already jumping or hanging from windows, fire department spokesman Tim Szymanski said. โThe first thing that you think of is: Weโve got to rescue those people. A fall of 16 feet or higher can be fatal.โ
Thirteen people were injured, mostly from smoke inhalation, but victims also had fractures, including one with broken legs and possibly a broken back, Szymanski said. It wasnโt immediately known if any of the deaths were from people who jumped from windows. No firefighters were injured.
The cause of the fire appeared to be accidental, and the fire was largely contained to the first-floor unit where it started in the stove area, Szymanski said.
Displaced residents told investigators that some had been using their apartmentโs stoves for warmth because the building lacked heat, he said. Temperatures overnight have been dipping into the high 30s, according to the National Weather Service. Meteorologist Chris Outler says the low was 40 degrees early Sunday.
A woman answering the phone at the office of the entity listed as the buildingโs owner, Las Vegas Dragon Hotel LLC in Las Vegas, told the AP she was told not to comment. She said she would leave a message for Adolfo Orozco, the man listed in state incorporation records as the businessโ managing member.
Szymanski said firefighters reported hearing smoke alarms going off, but not fire alarms. The State Fire Marshalโs Office will investigate for code violations, including any involving fire alarms, he said.
The cityโs code enforcement office did not immediately return telephone messages Saturday.
Saturdayโs fire was possibly the deadliest in the Las Vegas area since 1980, when 87 people died and more than 700 were injured in a fire at the MGM Grand Hotel.
Fire officials said 30 to 35 people were displaced and the Southern Nevada Red Cross said it sent personnel to provide assistance. County records list the building as having 41 units.
Because of the soot throughout the building, residents will not be able to go back into the building, Szymanski said.
Police had taped off the building, the front of which was blackened by smoke.
Sykes said one apartment on the first floor โwas literally just fire and smoke coming out of the windows.โ
He and his wife eventually got out of the building by making their way to a neighborโs apartment. There, they joined other residents in climbing one-by-one out of a bedroom window onto an air conditioning unit before dropping about 15 feet down to the ground below, Sykes said.
He and his wife helped four adults and four children escape, handing the children down to adults, he said.
Sykes said he heard a smoke alarm go off only after he and his wife were already out in the hallway contending with the smoke.
โIโm telling you, that place is totally not fit for anybody to live,โ he said.
Sykes, who said heโd lived there about six months, said there had been a small fire in the same building about six months ago.
The fire department warned the owner then that smoke detectors had to be installed, and they were put in about a month later, he said.
โBut after that, this is what happens,โ he said. โNow my wife and I, we need to find a place to live. Weโre homeless for the time being.โ
Sal Moreno, who lives in the apartment building next door, said police banged on his door around 4:30 a.m. and he fled into a street lit up with police cars, ambulances and fire trucks.
โThey made us leave,โ Moreno said. โThere was people running out with their cats and their dog. … It was hectic. It was hectic. It was crazy.โ
He said the building that burned was low-rent, and heโd heard some of the residents were using their ovens to stay warm because they didnโt have heat.
โItโs kind of a rough little neighborhood,โ he said.
