Four people were killed in a four-alarm fire which broke out at an
Oakland apartment building in 2551 San Pablo Ave, Oakland on Monday,
March 27th. Four others were taken to the hospital for treatment,
including two children.
One of the victims has been
identified as a 36-year-old Nigerian man, who stayed in Room 223. The
coroner said his name is not being released until the victim’s family is
notified.
According to neighbours, he kept to himself, loved computers
and would sketch Oakland landscapes with a set of colored pencils.
His
background is something of a mystery. Neither neighbors nor mental
health providers who referred him there know much about his personal
life, or how he wound up living in a second floor room of the halfway
house run by Urojas Community Services.
According to Oakland Fire
Battalion Chief Erik Logan, about 80 to 100 people lived in the West
Oakland building, which housed people recovering from addiction. He said
crews
were able to rescue seven people before the intensity of the fire
forced firefighters from the building.
Officials said they received calls reporting the fire around
6 a.m. and crews were quickly on the scene. However, the blaze was well
underway and they rapidly elevated the fire to four alarms and
retreated from the burning structure. The blaze was visible for several miles and sent a massive plume of smoke over Oakland.
The three other victims named Edwarn Anderson, 64, Cassandra
Robertson, 50, and Ashantikee Wilson, 41, have been identified and
named by the Alameda County Coroner’s Office. But the Nigerian man was
badly burned.
The coroner was finally able to identify him by a single
fingerprint, but his name is being withheld until family can be notified
— a fruitless search so far.
All research so far has led to dead-ends. Sheriff’s
investigators learned he once lived in Cincinnati, but nothing more. One
person who might have known him, Wilson, his apparent roommate in the
San Pablo building, also died in the fire.
“We’re having a hard time getting a hold of (the family),””Alameda County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Sgt. Ray Kelly said.
“Everybody we talked to doesn’t know him well or was just a friend. We
don’t know how he ended up here.”
Coroner’s officials were able to determine the person died
from smoke inhalation. Days later, deputies received a hit from the FBI
lab from a fingerprint, but it provided little more than a name.
Investigators believe the man’s family may reside in Nigeria and
attempts to contact anyone there have been unsuccessful, even after
speaking with his social worker and others, Kelly said.
The deadly fire tore through the three-story building nearly
four months after an inferno claimed 36 lives at the Ghost Ship
warehouse across town, in the Fruitvale district.
As fire investigators continue to probe what has initially
been ruled an accidental candle fire, the coroner’s office is working to
bring closure by finding the family of the fourth and final victim from
Room 223.
Urojas co-director the Rev. Aurea Lewis, who is hosting a
memorial for the four victims on April 23, remembered a man who stuck to a
pattern. She likened him to the Dustin Hoffman character in the movie
“Rain Man.” He had lived with Urojas for more than three years, she
recalled.
“He was a very quiet, observant man,” Lewis said. “He came to church every Sunday and in his own way praised.”
She has no idea how he came to the United States. “It was very
sketchy,” she said. “He was extremely savvy with computers. Computers
were his
way of expressing himself, and he liked to paint with colored pencils,”
Lewis said.
Source: Mercury News/San Francisco CBS Local
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