Updated:
01-24-2005 03:16:46 AM
Firehouse.com
Three
FDNY Bravest Lost in Blazes in Brooklyn and Bronx
Four Others Hospitalized with
Serious Injuries


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FDNY
Photo

Lt.
Curtis Meyran, died from
injuries sustained at the Bronx
fire.
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FDNY
Photo

Firefighter John Bellew, died
from injuries sustained at the
Bronx fire.
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FDNY
Photo

Richard T. Sclafani, died while
searching at Brooklyn fire
scene.
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AP
Photo/Gregory Bull

Debris in the snow, bottom
center, marks the spot where two
firemen were killed and four
critically injured when they
apparently jumped from the
building at left in an early
morning fire in the Bronx
borough of New York Sunday, Jan.
23, 2005.
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AP
Photo/Gregory Bull

New
York City fire crews look up at
the building where two firemen
were killed and four others
badly hurt in an early morning
fire in the Bronx borough of New
York, Sunday, Jan. 23, 2005.
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JAMES BARRON
Reprinted with Permission, The New York Times
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NEW YORK -- Three firefighters
were killed yesterday in two blazes at opposite ends of
New York City - two in a desperate plunge from an
apartment in the Bronx as they tried to escape a fire
that had burst through from the floor below, the other
after he had become trapped in the basement of a burning
house in Brooklyn.
On a morning of swirling snow
and brutal cold, the Bronx fire escalated in a matter of
minutes into a three-alarm blaze that 150 firefighters
struggled to bring under control. Officials suspected it
began when sparks from an extension cord attached to a
heater set fire to a mattress inside a third-floor
apartment at 236 East 178th Street in Morris Heights.
Six firefighters rushed to the
fourth floor after hearing that upstairs tenants might
have been trapped. Back on the third floor, something
went wrong - officials described a sudden loss of water
pressure in a hose - and flames surged through the
ceiling of the burning apartment, trapping the
firefighters on the fourth floor.
Mayday calls went out on their
radios as the firefighters headed out the windows,
hoping to survive.
Two of the six men - Lt. Curtis
W. Meyran, 46, and Firefighter John G. Bellew, 37 - did
not. The four others were hospitalized with numerous
broken bones.
The Brooklyn fire broke out
several hours later in a two-family house at 577 Jerome
Street in East New York where, fire officials said,
people attending a birthday party reported smelling
smoke. Firefighters from Ladder Company 103 headed into
the basement, searching for the origin of the blaze and
for anyone it might have trapped. The cellar became so
hot the firefighters decided they had no choice but to
back out.
One firefighter, Richard T.
Sclafani, 37, was left behind when the group retreated,
fire officials said. He had apparently been trying to
make it to safety when something - one fire official
said equipment had become entangled with a coat rack -
prevented his escape. His comrades, after taking a head
count and going back for him, found him unconscious on
the basement stairs. He was taken to Brookdale
University Hospital and Medical Center, and pronounced
dead a short time later.
In all, yesterday was the
deadliest day for the Fire Department since Sept. 11,
2001, when 343 members of the department died in the
collapse of the World Trade Center, a catastrophe that
continues to color much of the department's daily life.
Only one firefighter had died in the line of duty since
then, in what fire officials consider an extraordinary
run of luck after the huge loss on 9/11, a loss in
experience that was felt in firehouses across the city.
The last time three
firefighters died was four months before the Sept. 11
attack, when three men perished on Father's Day after an
explosion in a burning building in Astoria, Queens.
But officials said that
yesterday was different in a way that was unfamiliar in
its grimness, even for seasoned firefighters. "None of
us can remember a day when we had fatalities, fire
fatalities, at two separate incidents," Fire
Commissioner Nicholas Scoppetta said. Mayor Michael R.
Bloomberg described yesterday as "a day we'd all like to
forget, but we will not."
The Bronx fire was reported at
7:59 a.m. Alex Hernandez, 45, who lived on the second
floor, said he was alerted by shouts and screams: "I
heard somebody say, 'Hey, the apartment is burning
down.' I heard everybody screaming 'Fire! Fire!' "
Jorge Minier, 55, who lived on
the fourth floor, said he had been awakened by smoke and
heat. "I left without clothes on," he said. "I fled by
the roof in nothing more than my underwear." He dashed
across the roof to a staircase in a part of the building
that the fire had not reached.
The firefighters who went to
the fourth floor were soon caught in a nightmare of
logistics that involved a frozen hydrant and a frantic
effort to get enough water into the building. Somehow,
for reasons officials will investigate, that effort
failed. A hose might have burst, or been blocked by icy
debris.
Angel Quiles, 50, watched from
the street behind the apartment building, Echo Place, as
firefighters appeared at the windows on the upper floors
of the apartment house. He said that people standing
nearby - separated from the burning building by a
locked, fenced-in parking lot - were yelling, "Don't
jump."
But soon, one firefighter did,
and a moment later, Mr. Quiles said, another appeared at
the window. This time, people at the back of a center
for the elderly adjacent to the parking lot yelled for
him to stay where he was, but he, too, jumped.
To others, it appeared as if
the firefighters were being blown out the windows by the
intensity of the blaze or an explosion of some kind.
"All I could hear was people
saying, 'Don't jump, don't jump,' " Mr. Quiles said.
Mr. Scoppetta and Mayor
Bloomberg said the firefighters faced "a terrible
decision."
"They are trained to not get
trapped," Mr. Bloomberg said, "and sometimes things
happen beyond your control." He added: "They were faced
with the horrifying choice of either jumping from the
fourth-floor window or being burned to death. They
jumped, knowing they would be critically injured."
Officials said the fire spread
so quickly there was no time to set up inflatable
cushions for the firefighters to jump onto.
The four injured firefighters
were identified as Joseph P. DiBernardo and Jeffrey G.
Cool of Rescue 3 and Eugene Stolowsky and Brendan K.
Cawley of Ladder 27. Firefighter DiBernardo, whose
father is a retired deputy chief, was in serious
condition last night at Jacobi Medical Center. The
others were taken to St. Barnabas Hospital, where Mr.
Cool and Mr. Stolowsky were in critical condition, and
Mr. Cawley was in serious condition. Firefighter
Cawley's brother, Michael, was a firefighter who died at
the World Trade Center on Sept. 11.
The Brooklyn fire broke out
during a children's party on the first floor. Officials
said that Firefighter Sclafani, a 10-year veteran of the
department who was one of the first to arrive,
apparently believed there were people in the basement
and went there to look for them.
As he was on the way out, his
equipment apparently became tangled in a coat rack, fire
officials said. Other members of his unit realized that
he had not emerged and went back to find him. He was on
the staircase, unconscious and having difficulty
breathing.
At Brookdale hospital, an
attending physician, Michael Epter, said Firefighter
Sclafani had no pulse when he arrived and never regained
consciousness. He was pronounced dead at about 2:30. Dr.
Epter said he died of smoke inhalation and first-,
second- and third-degree burns over more than 80 percent
of his body. Seven other firefighters sustained minor
injuries, and no one in the house was hurt.
Shahkiran Montgomery, who lived
in the basement, said the building owner was his
mother-in-law. "I want to send my condolences from me
and my family to the firemen," he said, as a family that
lives on the second floor, the Cloudens, huddled in
their car, waiting for clearance from the Fire
Department to return to their apartment. In Mr.
Montgomery's quarters, water two to three feet deep was
being pumped out. The investigation into the cause of
the blaze was continuing.
The day's toll, though, was
obvious, as Mayor Bloomberg and Commissioner Scoppetta
appeared at the second news conference of the day to
release the name of a firefighter killed in the line of
duty.
"We will always remember the
brave men who fell today in service to our city," the
mayor said.
Reporting for this article
was contributed by Kevin Flynn, Kirk Semple, Jim Dwyer,
Diane Cardwell, Janon Fisher and Robin Stein.
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