Lahaina blaze now the deadliest in modern U.S. history as toll rises to 93

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U.S. fire administrator: collective fires top modern 10 worst

The devastation resulting from a complex of fires on Maui that started Tuesday represents the deadliest U.S. fire in recent years, U.S. Fire Administrator Lori Moore-Merrell said.

“This fire now has become the deadliest in the last 10 years,” she announced at a Saturday news conference convened by Gov. Josh Green.

The Maui complex of fires also represent the deadliest U.S. fire in the last 100 years. California’s Camp Fire in 2018, which killed 85, previously held that title.

Officials waned that the death troll would continue to climb as search and recovery teams planned to cover more ground in upcoming days.

No IDs yet for the dead, and police chief urges patience

Chief John Pelletier of the Maui Police Department on Saturday braced the public for more devastation in West Maui because the search, recovery, and identification process remains in its earliest stage.

At a news conference Saturday, he said no identities for the deceased have been completed in a process that can include rapid DNA testing, dental record comparisons, and informing family members.

“Every one of these 89 are John and Jane Does,” Pelletier said, adding that the death toll would increase and it was unclear where it will end up.

“None of us really knows the size of it yet,” Pelletier said. “You want it fast, or you want it right? We’re going to do it right.”

Governor says winds may have made fires unstoppable

Gov. Josh Green said Saturday that strong winds in Hawaii midweek may have made the fires on Maui unstoppable.

As questions grow regarding state and local officials’ initial responses to the nascent blazes Tuesday, the governor pointed to a culprit hard to tame in any circumstance: trade winds boosted by a high pressure system.

“The largest force in play that night were 80 mph winds,” Green said during a news conference on the fires and their aftermath. “Fortunately, now those winds have passed.”

Green suggested that the winds’ sudden and insurmountable force would have whipped hungry flames through West Maui regardless of the human reaction. “Having seen that storm, we have doubts that much could have been done with a fast-moving fire like that,” he added.



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