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Child playing with lighter near Christmas tree may have started deadly Philly fire

The possible cause is included in a search warrant for the rowhouse fire that killed 12 people, officials said.
Image: Philadelphia row house fire
People gather to pay their respects after a deadly row house fire, in the Fairmount neighborhood of Philadelphia, on Jan. 5, 2022.Matt Rourke / AP
/ Source: NBC News

Investigators are looking into whether a child playing with a lighter near a Christmas tree ignited the inferno in a Philadelphia rowhouse that left a dozen people dead.

The revelation that “a child age 5 or under” may have been involved in one of the city’s deadliest fires in decades was contained in a search warrant application filed in Common Pleas Court in the aftermath of Wednesday morning’s blaze.

Details of the warrant were first reported by The Philadelphia Inquirer.

“I can confirm that this detail was included in the warrant that was submitted,” Jane Roh, a spokeswoman for the Philadelphia District Attorney’s office, told NBC News.

“But this is not a criminal investigation. All we did was submit paperwork that would allow investigators access to the scene. This is an investigation that is being led by the Philadelphia Fire Department and the ATF,” Roh said, referring to the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

The rowhouse in the city’s Fairmount section is owned by the Philadelphia Housing Authority and was divided into two apartments, the agency said.

Nichole Tillman, a spokeswoman for the city’s housing authority, referred all questions to the Philadelphia Fire Marshal’s Office, which is leading the investigation and has not yet officially determined the cause of the blaze, which killed eight children.

Investigators “haven’t ruled anything out,” Special Agent Matthew Varisco, who heads the ATF’s office in Philadelphia, said at a news conference earlier Thursday.Investigators said they are also looking into why none of the battery-powered smoke alarms in the rowhouse were working.

A search of available property records turned up no reports of code violations at the building, which was built in 1920.

Eight people lived in one unit in the rowhouse that spanned the first and second floors of the rowhouse, while 18 resided in another unit that took up the second and third floors, the fire department said.

“That is a tremendous amount of people to be living in a duplex,” First Deputy Fire Commissioner Craig Murphy said on Wednesday after the last of the flames were doused.

The housing authority has not commented on the number of people residing in the rowhouse.

Fast-moving flames were devouring a second-floor kitchen and climbing a stairway connecting the second and third floors when firefighters, alerted by a 911 call, arrived around 6:40 a.m. Wednesday at the three-story building at 869 N. 23rd St.

It took about 50 minutes to get the blaze under control, and firefighters were able to rescue a child, the department said. But that child did not survive.

Two people remained in critical condition Thursday, according to authorities. One of those injured was taken to Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and the other to Temple University Hospital, officials said.

“We are devastated by the tragic loss of life–several of whom are children — and my thoughts are with the families and loved ones of the victims. I cannot express how unimaginable this is for loved ones,” Mayor Jim Kenney said Wednesday.

This story first appeared on NBCNews.com