Coroner: 6 children, 3 adults dead in early-morning apartment fire in Mississippi

By Holbrook Mohr, AP
Monday, December 28, 2009

Miss. apartment fire kills 6 children, 3 adults

STARKVILLE, Miss. — Fire tore through an apartment early Monday, killing six children and three adults, officials said.

The blaze was reported around 4 a.m., and firefighters worked into the afternoon, shoveling piles of burned debris from the second floor of a two-story red brick apartment building in the Academy Crossing complex.

“I opened my door and all I saw was flames coming out of the front of the apartment and the glass just blew and made a sound like a bomb,” said Ramona Doss, who lives across the parking lot in a separate building. “It’s a tragedy in Academy Crossing.”

Officials at West Memorial Funeral Home in Starkville, which will handle funeral arrangements, identified the victims as India Williams, 25, and her three children, Kamarion Williams, 2, Jacorian Vasser, 6, and Richard Vasser, 5; Castella “Maria” Bell, 18, and her three children, Ta’Nayia Bell, 4, Jayvion Bell, 3, and Sumaya Bell, 6 months; and Lakesha Gillespie, 20. Bell and Williams were cousins and Gillespie was a friend, the funeral home said.

All the victims were in the same apartment and Fire Chief Rodger Mann said investigators do not yet know what caused the blaze. He said a private company recently inspected the complex and found no problems.

“A fire investigation is like a puzzle,” he said. “We’ve got to get enough pieces of the puzzle to get a picture of what happened.”

Mildred Rollins, who owns the complex, said she had no comment on the fire and referred questions to the apartment’s insurance agent, Dale Stafford, a State Farm Insurance Co. agent. He said it was too early to comment.

Authorities did not release the identities of the victims, and Mann said he believed a woman who lived in the apartment had people visiting her. Only three of eight apartments in the building were occupied.

Doss said Williams would often bring her plates of home-cooked food. Williams’s children called her “Grandma” even though they are not related.

“Those babies just had Christmas,” Doss said. “They used to say ‘Grandma, you got any more candy?’ I’ll never hear that from them again.”

Mann said it was the worst fire in recent memory in Starkville, a city of about 24,000 full-time residents that is also home to Mississippi State University, the state’s largest school. The city is about 115 miles from Jackson, Birmingham, Ala., and Memphis, Tenn.

Associated Press Writer Jack Elliott Jr. in Jackson contributed to this report.

(This version CORRECTS ages of victims based on information from funeral home.)

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