LOCAL NEWS (MetroWest Daily News)
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The search, and the tears: Appliances could
hold clues about explosion
By Jennifer Rosinski
Friday, July 26,
2002
HOPKINTON - Investigators
yesterday searched for clues into the cause of Wednesday's deadly house blast,
initially blamed on a gas leak, by examining appliances and meters pried from
the remains of the Main Street home.
The oil and gas appliances
and several gas meters are now at the state fire marshal's office in Stow, where
investigators are deciding which pieces need further scrutiny, spokeswoman
Jennifer Mieth said.
"Now comes the rather
boring, slow process of examining the evidence and figuring out whether anything
needs to be tested," she said.
The fatal explosion at 65
Main St. claimed the lives of young sisters Iris and Violet Carey. Ten others,
including the girls' parents, Heath and Tara Carey, escaped with minor injuries,
but lost their homes.
Besides appliances and gas
meters, evidence also includes gas lines and pipes, Mieth said.
"They're focusing on a
possible gas explosion," she said. "They took anything that might have
possibly been a source of a gas leak into the home."
Tony Defreitas, who crawled
out of the home with his pregnant wife and son, said his last gas bill was more
than $20 above normal for no reason. Heath Carey said NStar was at the home just
a few months ago when the family's hot water heater was not working.
Town officials said oil was
used to heat the home and gas was used for other purposes.
A 911 tape released yesterday
could provide some more clues into what caused the devastating blast.
Janet Webster called 911 from
her cell phone outside of the four-family home at 1:41 a.m., seconds before it
blew up, authorities said.
"There's a terrible
noise coming from my basement and it smells like gas really bad," she told
the state police dispatcher who picked up the call and routed her to the
Hopkinton Fire Department, just 50 yards away.
It could be weeks before
investigators discover and release the official cause of the explosion, Mieth
said.
Crews finished clearing the
site of the blast by 2 p.m. yesterday and NStar officials arrived to inspect the
area. The cleanup included a visit from Zecco Inc. of Northborough, which
specializes in hazardous waste removal. Oil spilled onto the remains of the
house when workers hit an oil line with a front-end loader on Wednesday, Fire
Chief Gary Daughtery said.
Firefighters covered the hole
with a plastic tarp and filled it with sand and pieces of the building's
foundation.
"Our part of the
investigation is pretty much done," Daughtery said.
The crater in the ground is
littered with life's remains, including part of a dusty Barbie roller skate,
broken CDs, crumpled photographs and high-heels.
Families who lived in the
home lost almost everything. Crews brought anything that appeared intact to a
Westborough salvage yard, where families can claim their belongings.
One of the few things that
survived the explosion was a black and white photograph of Tara Carey's
grandmother as a baby, family friend Nancy Hause said. Its frame destroyed, the
photograph was pulled from the wreckage and kept at the police station.
Just a few feet away at the
edge of the curb sits a growing memorial to the little girls who perished in the
rubble. "Forever in our hearts" was written on the back of a purple
Rhino that also bears the little girls' names.
Residents of Hopkinton and
surrounding towns, many with their young children in tow, pulled up alongside
the memorial under a tree yesterday and deposited flowers and poems.
"I feel really bad for
them," 15-year-old Joyce Alexander said moments after contributing an
original poem to the pile.
"I hope the families of
Iris, Violet know that in a small town people are crying a lot," reads the
last line of Alexander's poem.
Defreitas' wife, Poliana
Compos, was due to give birth Wednesday. The 20-year-old was treated at
MetroWest Medical Center in Framingham and released yesterday afternoon, still
pregnant, authorities said. The family is staying in a hotel thanks to the
American Red Cross.
A fund has been set up to
benefit all four families who lived in the house. Donations should be made out
to The Flower Fund, c/o Middlesex Savings Bank, 10 Main St., Hopkinton, MA
01748.