CHARLESTON, S.C., June 21, 2007

Charleston Fire Probe Going Quickly

Arson Is Not Suspected In Furniture Store Tragedy That Killed 9 Firefighters

  • Video Remembering Their Comrades

    Charleston Fire Chief Rusty Thomas, joined with probationary firefighter Scott Thomas, speak with Julie Chen about their lost brethren and the events surrounding their deaths.

  • Video Charleston Copes With Tragedy

    As the coroner prepares to announce what killed nine firefighters who died in a warehouse fire, the people of Charleston, S.C., are struggling to cope with a tremendous loss. Kelly Cobiella reports.

    • Katie Flavell of the Hope Mills, N.C., Fire Department salutes at a memorial outside the Sofa Super Store in Charleston, S.C., on June 20, 2007.

      Katie Flavell of the Hope Mills, N.C., Fire Department salutes at a memorial outside the Sofa Super Store in Charleston, S.C., on June 20, 2007.  (AP)

    • This combination of photos provided on June 19, 2007, by the City of Charleston, S.C. shows the nine firefighters killed in a fire Monday night.

      This combination of photos provided on June 19, 2007, by the City of Charleston, S.C. shows the nine firefighters killed in a fire Monday night.  (AP Photo/City of Charleston)

    • An aerial view of the remains of the Sofa Super store in Charleston, S.C., on June 19, 2007. Nine firefighters lost their lives fighting a blaze at the store on Monday.

      An aerial view of the remains of the Sofa Super store in Charleston, S.C., on June 19, 2007. Nine firefighters lost their lives fighting a blaze at the store on Monday.  (AP)

    • A firefighter takes a moment after helping to put out the fire that claimed the lives of nine firefighters at the Sofa Super Store in Charleston, S.C., on June 19, 2007.

      A firefighter takes a moment after helping to put out the fire that claimed the lives of nine firefighters at the Sofa Super Store in Charleston, S.C., on June 19, 2007.  (AP Photo/Alice Keeney)

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  • Photo Essay Tragic Charleston Blaze

    Fire sweeps through warehouse, roof collapses, kills nine firefighters.

  • Interactive FIRE!

    A look at major fires and their victims, arson facts, and those who fight the flames.

(CBS/AP)  Dozens of federal investigators were going through the rubble of a Charleston furniture store Thursday, as the investigation into the fire earlier this week that killed nine firefighters continues.

"We will follow the investigation thoroughly and make sure we understand everything happened," Mayor Joseph P. Riley Jr. promised Wednesday.

Investigators said Thursday that their work is going much faster than expected, reports CBS News correspondent Cami McCormick.

Earl Woodham with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms said between 40 and 60 investigators are going through the fire scene, after a crane removed pieces of the roof at the Sofa Super Store on Wednesday night to allow access.

"We've made fantastic progress in this investigation," Woodham said. However, it still has to be a very systematic, deliberate investigation, because we are talking about evidence of fire and the natural elements of the rain. Everything has to be very systematic, very deliberate in gathering and examining this evidence."

Thursday was the first day investigators could get into the building.

"The roof was dangerous. It was melting and falling down," Woodham said. "The crane worked into the night and first thing this morning. The first area that we removed the roof from was areas that were interest of us."

Investigators were using two dogs trained to find accelerants that might have enhanced the Monday night blaze, although arson is not suspected.

Assistant Fire Chief Larry Garvin said he made three trips in and out of the furniture store, and each time the smoke seemed thicker — but still, nothing inside seemed to be burning. As many as 16 firefighters entered to train hoses at the fire on the loading dock.

Then firefighters got word that a store employee had called 911, saying he was trapped in a repair shop in the rear of the building. Garvin and four other firefighters went to the back, chopped through a locked gate with an ax and heard the man banging on the wall with a hammer.

That someone was Jonathan Tyrrell, a store employee, reports CBS News correspondent Kelly Cobiella.

"The first thing that popped into my head is I wouldn't be able to see my wife and little girl again," Tyrrell said.

Tyrrell was pulled out just before the roof collapsed.

Garvin said that when he returned to the fire trucks, he was told several men hadn't come out of the store. The fire was burning inside, having intensified within minutes, and grew hot enough to blow out the store's windows.

Firefighters sounded an air horn on one of the trucks three times — a signal to warn anyone inside the building to get out. Nobody emerged. No one answered radio calls. Firefighters who tried to rescue those inside were forced back by raging flames, Garvin said.

A few minutes later, the roof collapsed in a pile of twisted metal.

"The collapse of the roof did not cause injuries to the firefighters that resulted in their deaths," said Coroner Rae Wooten, adding that it is impossible to know whether the collapsed roof trapped the firefighters, leading to their injuries. "The cause of their death has been determined to be a combination of smoke inhalation and thermal injury."

The city and the South Carolina's Labor, Licensing and Regulation Department say they plan to investigate whether Charleston fire crews violated safety procedures and whether they had proper training and equipment to respond to the blaze, the nation's deadliest firefighting tragedy since Sept. 11.

"Part of the purpose is to look, for us or any fire department in the country, if there are lessons learned in terms of how well things were done or any aspect of it," Riley said Wednesday, adding that he's confident the department followed proper procedure.

Fire officials have defended how they handled the fire.

"They didn't make a mistake when they first went in there," said Assistant Fire Chief Ronnie Classen. "They did exactly what they were supposed to do, there's no question."

A public memorial service is planned for Friday morning in North Charleston.


© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by oldfriendtwo June 22, 2007 12:37 AM EDT
OUR THOUGHTS AND PRAYERS ARE WITH THE FALLEN FIRE FIGHTERS AND THEIR FAMILIES! ESPECIALLY "MR. MARK KELSEY" WE KNEW THIS OUTSTANDING YOUNG MAN WHEN HE WAS IN HIGH SCHOOL IN WASHINGTON, INDIANA. WE KNEW HIS PARENTS AND BROTHERS. THEY ARE VERY VERY FINE PEOPLE. ALTHOUGH WE HAVE NOT SEEN THE KELSEY FAMILY FOR A FEW YEARS WE STILL CONSIDER THEM FRIENDS. GOD BLESS THE KELSEY FAMILY. GOD BLESS ALL OF THE FIRE FIGHTERS THAT GAVE THIER LIFE TO SAVE OTHERS. JERRY&CAROL PUGH, TOM, JOHN & DANNY VANCE
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by Tundrajack June 21, 2007 7:50 PM EDT
Sofa King Tragic they had to die when all occupants were out of the building.

Bless them and their Loved ones.
PA. Fire Police
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by sheahandan June 21, 2007 7:37 PM EDT
MY THOUGHTS AND PRAYERS ARE WITH MY FALLEN BROTHERS FROM CHARLESTON AND THEIR FAMILIES.

CHICAGO FIREFIGHTER
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