May 15, 2010 7:29 AM

Gun Factory Explosion Kills 2 in N.H.

By
CBSNews
(AP)  Multiple explosions at a gun and ammunition manufacturing plant in far northern New Hampshire on Friday killed two people, shook buildings blocks away, filled the sky with black smoke and forced the evacuation of dozens of homes.

State Fire Marshal Bill Degnan confirmed the deaths at the MDM Muzzleloader building in Colebrook. He said the two victims, along with another person who received minor injuries, were the only people in the building at the time.

The blasts started just after 1 p.m., said Mia West, Colebrook's public information officer. She said firefighters initially were unable to get close enough to fight the blaze because ammunition was still going off more than two hours later.

At Colebrook Elementary School, paraprofessional Saralyn Boutin at first thought she was hearing thunder, but after the second boom, "I was hanging onto the desk."

Boutin, 28, said some of the students in the 8th-grade classroom were crying. Hours later, she was heading to her mother's house to spend the night because her own street remained blocked off. Some of her neighbors' homes had windows blown out, she said.

Her colleague, guidance counselor Jennifer Noyes, said she worried for her 2-year-old son, who was at a daycare center near the factory. She immediately called the center only to find that he had slept through the whole thing.

Degnan said the fire continued to burn more than four hours the explosion was reported, and that it was too soon to determine the cause.

"We're just getting into the investigation and trying to determine the details," he said.

About 40 nearby homes were evacuated, though some were allowed to return home by late Friday evening. Some residents reported hearing the explosion up to a mile and a half away, West said. Displaced residents were offered accommodations at The Balsams Grand Resort and Hotel in nearby Dixville Notch.

Several communities in New Hampshire and Vermont sent fire crews.

"It's just major, major explosions and black powder," said Mishel Fenn, a bartender at the Colebrook House motel, who felt the blast two blocks away. "It shook the building, and I'm in a large building."

Calls to company officials were not immediately returned Friday. According to a report in a January issue of The Colebrook Chronicle, a weekly newspaper, a worker at the plant suffered serious injuries to his face and wrist when he a machine that processes gunpowder flashed in his face. That fire was put out quickly.

During Friday's explosion, the editor of another newspaper said she thought something had hit the roof of her building.

"It knocked a picture off of my wall, right next to my desk," said Karen Ladd, editor and publisher of The News and Sentinel in Colebrook. "I will admit I panicked and I said, 'Get out!"'

John Gannon, 47, of Cambridge, Mass., was visiting a friend when the apartment building shook.

"It felt like a truck blew up outside," he said, adding that he was sorry to hear that two people were killed.

"It's terrible," he said.

Colebrook is about 140 miles north of the capital city of Concord and 10 miles from the Canadian border.

AP
Add a Comment
by omega42 May 15, 2010 10:10 AM EDT
Sarah Palin says Obama deliberately set this fire to deprive "real Americans" of their guns and ammunition.
Reply to this comment
by berlinfoto-2009 May 15, 2010 9:55 AM EDT
TALK ABOUT SPIN AND OR PROPAGANDA, this article takes the cake.
This unfortunate incident is being used to spread fear, and falsehoods.
(((((((( This was not what is commonly considered ammunition))))))) This was black powder, black powder is an explosive, and will detonate. Modern ammunition smokeless powder ammunition will not.
It is my belief that the reporters of this article intentionally are trying to deceive Americans, and that they, should be fired from their jobs, and forever be banned from journalism.
Reply to this comment
by lilbear925 May 15, 2010 2:05 PM EDT
I agree that the spin imparted by CBSNEWS reporting was definitely aimed at misleading the public. The "black powder" mentioned is actually NOT black powder at all, but a mixture of chemicals to closely reproduce the effective power of black powder without the dangers of the unstable nature of real black powder. It is commonly available across the nation as a black powder substitute for shooters of "black powder" type firearms used in both hunting and recreational target shooting. Black powder firearms are not as powerful as cartridge type firearms and require more skill by the hunters and shooters who use them, strictly because the guns are not as accurate at long distances and do not produce the high velocities of "high powered rifles".
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