FALL RIVER, Mass. — Flames roared through an assisted-living facility in Massachusetts, killing nine people and trapping residents inside, including some who leaned out of windows and screamed for help, authorities said Monday. At least 30 people were hurt.
Firefighters responded to the Gabriel House facility in Fall River, about 50 miles south of Boston, at about 9:50 p.m. Sunday and were met with heavy smoke and flames at the front of the building. The cause was under investigation, authorities said.
Lorraine Ferrara, one of about 70 residents at the facility, awoke to a neighbor pounding on her door. She tried to make her way through the smoke in the hallway but turned back.
The sprinkler system was shooting hot water on her back, so she retreated into her room. "It was filled with smoke,'' she said. ''I opened the window as far as I could, yelling ‘Help! Help! Second floor!'''
A firefighter broke the window and carried her down the ladder, she said.
''I really thought I was going to die,'' she said. ''I thought there was no way out.''
Others who were rescued were taken to hospitals. Jarren Oldrid described the scene as ''pretty terrifying'' as he tried to figure out if his 67-year-old father, Steven Oldrid, was safe. He found him recovering from smoke inhalation at a hospital.
''It's kind of just a whirlwind of trying to figure out what's happening, how this could happen in such a major way,'' he said.