Homeowner: Did furnace cause Indiana blast?

— The search for what caused a deadly explosion that rocked an Indianapolis neighborhood turned to natural gas Monday, with officials checking gas lines and a homeowner saying a problem furnace could be to blame.

The National Transportation Safety Board sent investigators to check gas main and other lines serving the neighborhood where two people were killed and seven injured in the weekend blast. Local gas supplier Citizens Energy said it also was checking gas lines and a meter at the home that exploded.

But officials cautioned that it was too soon to rule out other causes, saying only that they do not believe a meth lab was to blame for the explosion that obliterated two homes and severely damaged dozens of others.

“It’s too early to speculate that this might have been caused by a gas leak,” Citizens Energy spokesman Sarah Holsapple said at an afternoon news briefing.

The owner of one of thehomes that was destroyed said there had been a problem with the furnace in the past few weeks.

John Shirley, 50, of Noblesville said that he had received a text message within the past week and a half from his daughter, whocomplained that the furnace in the home where she lived with her mother and her mother’s boyfriend had broken. The malfunction had forced them to stay in a hotel, the girl said.

When Shirley asked whether the furnace hadbeen fixed, his daughter said yes. He said he wasn’t aware of any additional problems until he heard from his daughter again Sunday morning.

“I get a text from my daughter saying, ‘Dad, our home is gone.’ Then I called my ex-wife, and she said what happened,” he said.

His ex-wife, Monserrate Shirley, declined to comment Monday.

Scott Davis, president and principal engineer of GexCon US, an explosioninvestigation firm, questioned whether a furnace could cause the type of damage seen in the neighborhood. Furnaces have multiple safety triggers that prevent them from releasing that much natural gas.

“For a furnace to allow that much gas through, you’d have to defeat many of the safety features,” he said.

Investigators said it could be some time before they determine a cause for the blast, which sparked a fire, blew out windows, collapsed ceilings and shook homes three miles away.

“It’s a methodical investigation. You have to move one step at a time,” said GaryCoons, the city’s homeland security director.

Investigators will treat the area as a crime scene until they rule out foul play, Public Safety Director Troy Riggs said.

The blast forced about 200 people out of their homes in the once-tidy neighborhood of one- and two-story single-family houses. Some have been allowed to reoccupy their homes, and others have been escorted in to retrieve valuables and other belongings. Adam Collins, the city’s deputy code enforcement director, said 29 homes remained uninhabitable Monday.

Mark Karnes, whose house four doors from the blast site suffered severe structural damage, hoped to retrieve clothes and look for his cat. But he also questioned the wisdom of going back inside the house.

“Because the walls bowed out and separated from the ceiling, I don’t think it’s safe,” he said.

The blast flattened the house Shirley co-owns with his ex-wife and one next door that belonged to second-grade teacher Jennifer Longworth and her husband,John. Indianapolis police said Monday the bodies of the pair were found in the basement of their home, which was leveled in the blast.

A candlelight vigil was held Sunday night at Southwest Elementary School, where Jennifer Longworth taught for 12 years.

John Longworth had worked at Indy Audio Labs for 10 years and was director of product development and technology, according to the company, which issued a statement Monday saying that Longworth’s co-workers were “saddened by the loss.”

Jennifer Longworth was quiet but funny, John Shirley said, and her husband was an Indianapolis Colts fan who maintained a garden of wildflowers along the side of the house.

“They were just very sweet people,” he said.

Indiana real estate records show Shirley’s house had been for sale for a year before it was taken off the market in March.

Information for this article was contributed from New York by Lynn Dombek and Rhonda Shafner of The Associated Press.

Front Section, Pages 7 on 11/13/2012

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