INDIANAPOLIS — Investigators looking for the cause of a deadly Indianapolis house explosion got more support for their theory that natural gas was a factor Wednesday when an attorney for the owner of a home at the core of the blast said his client’s 12-year-old daughter had smelled a strange odor off and on for weeks.
Randall Cable, an attorney for homeowner Monserrate Shirley, said Wednesday that the woman’s daughter had complained of an odor outdoors and in the garage area for several weeks before Saturday’s blast that leveled two homes and left dozens more uninhabitable. Two people were killed.
“Extensive gas explosions are not easy to put back together,” forensics consultant Jay A.Siegel said. “Finding the pieces and putting them back together is a giant puzzle.”
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-201_162...es-faulty-furnace/?tag=contentAux;mostPopular
Owner of exploded Ind. home cites faulty furnace
INDIANAPOLIS The owner of a house that exploded in Indianapolis, killing two people and damaging dozens of homes so severely officials say they must be demolished, said Monday that a problem furnace could be at fault.
John Shirley, 50, of Noblesville, told The Associated Press that his daughter sent him a text message last week complaining that the furnace in the home where she lives with her mother and her mother's boyfriend had gone out and required them to stay at hotel.
But Shirley also said when he asked if the furnace had been fixed, his daughter said yes, and he wasn't aware of any additional problems until he heard from his daughter again Sunday morning.
"I get a text from my daughter saying `Dad, our home is gone.' Then I called my ex-wife and she said what happened," he said.
A source in touch with the couple told CBS Indianapolis affiliate WISH-TV that a member of the family had smelled gas in the house.
Citizens Energy, the natural gas supplier to the home, did not receive any reports about a faulty furnace at the home, but the homeowner wouldn't necessarily report such a problem to the utility, spokeswoman Sarah Holsapple said. And if the homeowner hired someone to fix the furnace, the contractor wouldn't need to tell the utility.
That has to be the worst article I've ever read. It starts off about an explosion and devolves into some guy wildly speculating and ranting about his ex wife. WTF would they even waste the space for that?
Investigated as a homicide:
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/2...ed-homicide/sAnFt2CTLiDIZfYQPnMJTM/story.html
sound pretty retarded now, doesn't it?I think it could have possibly been a drone that was taken over and they missed the main target or they just decided to hit anything with it. Looks like damage from a couple of hellfire missiles.
If not that then maybe a meteor? Wouldn't there be a crater though? Pieces of the rock everywhere?
The news is really quiet about it.. its way down the list of 'stories'. The stupid cia affair is more important some how.
I still think the homeowners had something to do with it. You don't just board your cat for a day. (Well, not most normal people.)
I still think the homeowners had something to do with it.
Investigated as a homicide:
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/2...ed-homicide/sAnFt2CTLiDIZfYQPnMJTM/story.html
I heard it on the news this morning about a suspicious white van near the scene shortly before the explosion.
http://www.wthr.com/story/20402423/three-to-be-charged-in-indianapolis-explosion
Three to be charged in Indianapolis explosion
Interesting. They're saying intentional and natural gas. Somebody purposefully leave gas on or cut something and plant ignition source elsewhere? Wasn't the house in trouble and the owners could have motive to collect insurance?
Interesting. They're saying intentional and natural gas. Somebody purposefully leave gas on or cut something and plant ignition source elsewhere? Wasn't the house in trouble and the owners could have motive to collect insurance?
I think it could have possibly been a drone that was taken over and they missed the main target or they just decided to hit anything with it. Looks like damage from a couple of hellfire missiles.