CBS/AP/ November 12, 2012, 6:27 AM

Feds joining search for cause of Indy blast

Flames from Indianapolis blast Saturday night

Flames from Indianapolis blast Saturday night / AP Photo/The Indianapolis Star, Matt Kryger

INDIANAPOLIS The blast was so loud it woke people as far as three miles away, triggering thoughts of a plane crash or earthquake.

Alex Pflanzer was sound asleep when his home's windows blew out and his wife started screaming.

What he didn't know -- what nobody knew Saturday night about an hour before midnight -- was that something had caused an explosion that leveled at least two nearby houses in this middle-class Indianapolis neighborhood so far south that it's almost a suburb.

The blast killed two people and rendered whole blocks uninhabitable.

The cause of the explosion remains under investigation.

"I didn't know what was going on," Pflanzer said. "I thought someone was breaking in the house, because the alarm was going off."

Pflanzer grabbed his gun and started checking the house. Then he noticed the front door was open and saw a reddish glow flickering outside.

"I walked outside and all the houses were on fire," he said.

Officials have not released the identities of the two people who were killed. However, a candlelight vigil was held Sunday night at Southwest Elementary School in nearby Greenwood for second-grade teacher Jennifer Longworth. She and her husband, John Dion Longworth, lived in one of the homes destroyed in the blast. And family members confirmed to CBS affiliate WISH-TV in Indianapolis that the Longworths were the victims.

On Saturday night after the blast, about 200 people from the neighborhood were sent to a nearby school until they could find someplace to spend the rest of the night.

Pflanzer, his wife and two dogs found a hotel room, but they couldn't coax their panic-stricken cat out of the crawlspace.

"All the material things can be replaced, so I'm not worried about that stuff," he said. "People are a lot worse off than I am. People died, and so our thoughts and prayers go out to them first."

21 Photos

Explosion destroys homes in Indiana

As a summery day dawned Sunday, it became clear that the extent of the damage was even worse than it had seemed in the dark, when as many as 70 firefighters who responded to a report of a house on fire instead found a row of homes engulfed in flames.

By Sunday afternoon, splintered wood on charred earth were all that remained of at least two homes at the blast's epicenter, and two homes on either side were blackened husks. Across the street, garage doors had buckled from the heat.

Deputy Code Enforcement Director Adam Collins said as many as 31 homes were damaged so badly that they might have to be demolished. The explosion damaged a total of 80 homes, he said. He estimated the damage at $3.6 million.

Some residents were allowed to return to their homes to retrieve a few belongings Sunday under police escort. Others whose homes weren't as badly damaged were allowed to return, but officials said they would have to do without electricity overnight. And others, officials said, never will be allowed to go back inside their homes.

"There are houses that will have to be torn down," Deputy Fire Chief Kenny Bacon said.

Bacon said investigators had not eliminated any possible causes for the blast. But U.S. Rep. Andre Carson, who represents the area, said he had been told a bomb or meth lab explosion had been ruled out.

Dan Able, a 58-year-old state employee who lives across the street from the flattened homes, was puzzled by the blast.

"I'm wondering about all the possibilities it could be," he said. "I don't know how a gas leak could do that kind of damage."

"We just don't know" what the cause was, said police spokesman Kendale Adams. "We're working to get to the bottom of it."

Dan Considine, a spokesman for Citizens Energy, said the utility had not received any calls from people in the area smelling the telltale rotten-eggs smell of a chemical added to natural gas, which is odorless.

"Most of the time when there's a gas leak, people smell it," he said. "But not always."

Carson said the National Transportation Safety Board and the federal Department of Transportation, which have oversight over pipelines, were also sending investigators.

Bacon said the toll could have been much worse. "I know we're very fortunate that some of the people weren't home," he said.

Bryan and Trina McClellan were at home with their 23-year-old son, Eric, when the shockwave from the blast a block away knocked out the windows along one side of their house.

Their first instinct was to check on their grandchildren, two toddlers who were in the basement. One held his ears and said, "Loud noise, loud noise."

Eric McClellan said he ran to the scene of the explosion.

"Somebody was trapped inside one of the houses, and the firefighters were trying to get to him. I don't know if he survived," he said, adding that firefighters ordered him to leave the area.

Officials said at least two dozen off-duty police officers who live on the city's south side rushed to the scene to help with the rescue effort.

Once the flames were out, firefighters went through what was left of the neighborhood, one home at a time, in case people had been left behind, Fire Lt. Bonnie Hensley said.

Most evacuees eventually left the school to stay with relatives, friends or at hotels, and the relief operation was moved to a church just a few blocks away. Tables in the church dining room were piled high with blankets, food, diapers, water and other supplies. An animal shelter on the south side of the city offered free boarding for pets whose owners had nowhere to take them.

The church's pastor, the Rev. Rob Hock, said hundreds of members had shown up to help after he put out a call during the morning services. Volunteers were working to be sensitive to the stress on people whose homes had been scarred.

"This is hard on them," he said. "This is not an easy thing for them.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
20 Comments Add a Comment
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micelist says:
Bet they may find arson was the cause. Planned absence, pet boarded, recent divorce, gambler. All red flags to any fire investigator
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nygurl1 replies:
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My that is quite a story.
You should write a book!
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whatireallythink says:
Perhaps someone in one of the houses had constructed a bomb. I think if I were investigating that I would look at the emails and computer information and charge card history of the people who lived there. If there were any neighborhood cameras they might have picked up on something. Did they have any enemies? All these things seem paranoid, but need to be investigated. It would be simply too easy to blame the gas company.

It seemed to be centralized in the one house - wouldn't a gas line blow up one after another - like a domino effect? Could it have been a car bomb on a vehicle in their driveway or garage? I want all these questions answered by the press and investigating law officers.
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nygurl1 replies:
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Idiot - there is nothing left!
No e-mails, no computer.
Read the story and any others you see!
There IS NOTHING LEFT!
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Rosanne789 says:
To: "NEWSTSER90210" You honestly want someone who has just gone through loosing their homes,and everything in it(Some lost their lives!)To have to pay for the animal shelter? It shouldn't matter how much money one has, they will need all the help they can get. And as far as the insurance goes, do you think that will replace lost lives?
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Rick_Carter1 says:
All I can say is thank God this wasn't Belle Harbor, or they would all probably be looking for an exit visa. - RC
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Rick_Carter1 says:
(I hope you at least got some use out of my 'license' (which BTW is probably due to expire anyday now), ya'll think?) - RC
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Calltwoarms says:
Thank God this happened at night. Imagine if the neighbors were out and about when the homes exploded. whatever the cause of the explosion it had a truly devastating impact. Rest In Peace whoever had their lives taken by this terrifying event.
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Rick_Carter1 says:
(Actually, you might be quite right, MC_ESCHER! Many thanks INDEED for your contribution (I actually calculated that I could draw some knowledgeable person out). I will refine the modeling in my brain accordingly.) - RC
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Rick_Carter1 says:
(I model everything, even the whole Universe, in my head. It is a life long passion of mine which I endeavor to eternally refine.) - RC
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MC_Escher says:
I'm sorry, but that's not correct

What happened there was an ordinary Fuel-Air explosion which requires only a vaporized accelerant and air. You would be correct that pure oxygen would prvide more oxidizer, but it isn't neccesary.

What makes a F-A explosion so devestating is that it doesn't have a single point of detonation the way more familir explosions do. When you detonate any ordinary explosize the chemical burns at a certain speed, which is known as Brisance. This creates a ball of expanding gas that pushes the air in front of it and moves away from the point of detonation at an exponentially decreasing speed.

In an F-A explosion you have a Fuel, in this case most liely Propane or natural Gas, that fills an area, expanding until it reaches what's called a Stociometric Ratio with the air. At this point the Fuel and Air mix is optimal and if there is an ignition source either introduced or already present, the cloud will detonate.

As the pressure wave moves away from the point of detonation, instead of it's velocity dropping off it picks up speed as more energy is added. This is because as the pressure wave moves through the cloud of what has become an explosive mix, with the flame front travelling behind it, more energy is dded until the flame front reaches the limits of the cloud. Only at that point does the explosion begin to behave "normally".

The type of damage shown in the picture is classic F-A damage.
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steph_in_az replies:
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MC_Escher Thank you for the explaination! You are smart!
creeper00 replies:
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But if you had a leaking gas line, wouldn't that continue to burn until they shut it off? Where was the plume of flame to be expected from a burning gas leak?
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Rick_Carter1 says:
((I am NOT worried about coming under investigation. I have already crossed that line a THOUSAND TIMES OVER (at least), ya'll think?)) - RC
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