There was a house here that exploded 3 years ago. I remember that it sounded like someone made a flying tackle into the front wall of my house, so hard that the metal porch railing rang out. This was 2,900 feet, .55 miles, away as the crow flies.
I found out tonight that 2 years ago, Michigan State Police investigators finished the investigation into the deadly house explosion, but have not determined a cause. A laboratory examination of the evidence recovered from the explosion was held by all interested parties, state police said. That included law enforcement, fire investigators, insurers, and private companies. Police said investigators and experts were able to examine each piece of evidence collected from the incident, including the natural gas supply piping and associated gas appliances that were removed from 3906 Hogarth Ave. Investigators determined a natural gas leak started from the home at 3906 Hogarth Ave, however, an ignition source could not be found due to the extensive damage and resulting explosion, police said. The explosion killed a 4-year-old girl and a 55-year-old woman while injuring two other people. At least 30 homes were damaged in the area.
Investigators are not sure where the natural gas leak originated in the house or what sparked the devastating explosion, which caused the deaths of 3-year-old Nuveah Lucas and 55-year-old Lisa Rochowiak. Several other neighbors were injured. Three houses on Hogarth Avenue were completely destroyed and five others sustained heavy damage. Dozens of residents on Flint's west side were evacuated for days after the explosion. Some residents still couldn't return home nearly 10 months after the Nov. 22 blast. Consumers Energy studied the area in the days after the explosion and determined an underground gas leak was not the cause. Investigators from the Flint Fire Department, Michigan State Police and other agencies determined a gas leak above ground led to the explosion.
A lawsuit is seeking a massive judgment two weeks after the deadly explosion on Hogarth Avenue in Flint. The Fieger Law Firm, led by Geoffrey Fieger who famously defended Jack "Dr. Death" Kevorkian, filed a $50 million lawsuit against Consumers Energy on Monday, alleging that the utility allowed natural gas to leak and build up before the blast on Nov. 22. "This leak in the main was allowed to dispel natural gas for days allowing it to accumulate that caused these the bombs that went off in Flint," said attorney James Harrington. The explosion caused the deaths of 55-year-old Lisa Rochowiak and 3-year-old Nu'Veah Lucas two weeks ago, according to the lawsuit. The case was filed on behalf of Rochowiak's family. "It came from their gas main off of the street that was allowed to migrate into the homes and kill these two individuals," Harrington said.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wgGzq-_sAfQ