Rescuers begin the task of scouring the wreckage of the most destructive fire in state records, in search of remains of the dead
Rescuers begin the task of scouring the wreckage of the most destructive fire in state records, in search of remains of the dead
The infernos raging at both ends of California have created a double nightmare for residents. Many who fled fires found themselves stuck on traffic-clogged roads. Some died in their cars.
Authorities have reported 6 additional deaths in a Northern California, raising the death toll to 29 and matching the deadliest wildfire on record in California history.
At least five search teams were working in Paradise — a town of 27,000 that was largely incinerated on Thursday — and in surrounding Northern California communities.
With hearses standing by, crews search for bodies in the smoking ruins of Paradise and relatives desperately look for missing loved ones, as wildfires rage at both ends of California and the death toll rises to 31.
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Crews in Northern California have found six more bodies amid the ruins of the town of Paradise, while another wildfire in Malibu has burned celebrity mansions.
Sheriff’s investigators have begun the agonizing task of scouring through the wreckage of California’s most destructive fire on record in search of the dead. By Sunday, the death toll had reached 31, but it seemed likely to climb.