At Least Two Unaccounted for After NYC Building Fire, Official Says - East Idaho News
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At Least Two Unaccounted for After NYC Building Fire, Official Says

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032615 EVillageExplosion?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1427454706779WABC-T(NEW YORK) — Two people were unaccounted for after a building explosion led to a seven-alarm fire in New York City, according to a New York Police Department official.

The NYPD official identified one of those unaccounted for as Nicholas Figueroa, 23. No information on the second person was immediately available.

Four people were in critical condition and at least 15 others were injured after the fire in Manhattan’s East Village Thursday afternoon.

Figueroa’s father, Nick Figueroa, told ABC News his son went to lunch in a restaurant at the bottom of the building that caught fire. He said he has had no contact with his son since the explosion and that investigators began searching for his son Thursday evening.

Neal Figueroa, Nicholas’ brother, told ABC affiliate WABC-TV Friday morning outside the Harlem apartment he shares with his brother that the family knows Nicholas Figueroa was at the Sushi Park restaurant because he has a pending charge for $13.04 at the establishment. The family last heard from him just before 2 p.m. ET, he said.

“Right now, we’re just worried,” he said.

Neal Figueroa said his brother was on a second date with a female co-worker that he hadn’t yet met, but who he believed was in the hospital with numerous injuries following the explosion.

The family found out Nicholas Figueroa was missing when he didn’t show up to work at Bowlmor Lanes at Chelsea Piers, he said. He was expected at 5 p.m. ET.

Neal Figueroa said the family has tried to locate Nicholas Figueroa through police, investigators and 311.

Neal Figueroa told WABC-TV he was confident in his brother, referring to his brother as “Superman.”

“I know he’s strong enough to get out of this,” he said.

It was unclear how many people were inside the building when the fire occurred, according to the New York City Fire Department. The incident took place in a bustling area with many restaurants and pedestrians, blocks away from New York University.

FDNY confirmed that three buildings collapsed as a result of the fire and that firefighters were still putting water on some pockets of fire Friday morning. As of 4:30 a.m. ET, firefighters had not started to go through the rubble.

“Preliminary evidence suggests a gas-related explosion,” said New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, adding that the investigation is ongoing. He said the incident “appears to have been caused by plumbing and gas work that occurred in 121 2nd Avenue.”

The four people in critical condition include two individuals with burns to their airways and another person who was unconscious following the event, according to FDNY Commissioner Daniel Nigro.

Of the about 250 firefighters who responded to the blaze, four were transported to area hospitals, where one was in fair condition, said the fire department. The conditions of the other firefighters weren’t immediately released.

Around 3:17 p.m., witnesses reported what sounded like an explosion at Sushi Park restaurant at 121 2nd Avenue, which is at the bottom of a five-story, pre-war building that houses a handful of residential units.


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