Tragic: How bride, friends who died in limo fire sought desperate escape with no success

Burn marks left on the railing on San Mateo-Hayward Bridge are pictured on the morning after a fatal limousine fire in Foster City, California May 5, 2013. REUTERS/Stephen Lam

Reuters/Reuters – Burn marks left on the railing on San Mateo-Hayward Bridge are pictured on the morning after a fatal limousine fire in Foster City, California May 5, 2013. REUTERS/Stephen Lam

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – The bodies of a new bride and four friends who died trapped inside a burning limousine on a bridge over San Francisco Bay were found pressed against an opening between the passenger compartment and driver’s seat, a county coroner said on Monday.

Four other women managed to escape the Lincoln Town Car but suffered burns or smoke inhalation when it erupted in flames on Saturday night while heading across the San Mateo-Hayward bridge to a party at a hotel in Foster City, about 25 miles south of San Francisco overlooking the bay, the California Highway Patrol said.

 The San Francisco Chronicle newspaper reported that among the dead was new bride Neriza Fojas, 31, who had been celebrating her recent marriage with eight female friends, all of them in their 30s or 40s.

Investigators were seeking to determine on Monday what caused the fire that law enforcement officials said killed the five women as they sought to escape.

A spokeswoman for Santa Clara Valley Medical Center said two of the surviving passengers remained hospitalized there on Monday afternoon, one in critical condition and the other in serious condition.

Representatives for Stanford Medical Center, where the other two surviving victims were taken, have declined to comment on their condition. The Los Angeles Times reported that one had been released.

 The San Mateo County medical examiner, Robert Foucrault, told reporters at a press conference on Monday morning that the deceased women were found clustered around a small window in a partition between the passenger compartment and driver’s seat.

“When we got there … they were up against the partition,” Foucrault said. “They were getting away from the fire and that’s why they were in the front towards the partition. You could also probably say that they were trying to get out as well.”

Law enforcement officials said it was too early to determine what caused the 1999 Town Car to catch fire at its rear end, pending an inspection of the white stretch limousine by mechanical experts and fire department investigators.

‘THE GRIEF, THE ANGUISH

California Highway Patrol Captain Mike Maskarich said there was no evidence that the limo had been involved in a collision or struck any debris in the road. He said it had been carrying one more passenger than the eight than had been authorized.

“It was a horrible incident that happened,” Kultar Singh, the owner of the car company, Limo Stop, told Reuters. “I send my condolences to the families that lost their lives. I’m very saddened.”

 The limousine’s driver, Orville Brown, told CNN in an interview that he had picked up the nine women in Alameda, California, and that “everything was going fine” at first as he drove across the bridge.

At some point one of the women knocked on the partition and complained of smoke in the passenger compartment, but because of loud music playing in the car he at first misunderstood and thought she was asking to smoke a cigarette.

“I looked back and I just saw the grief, the anguish on her face and I started to smell the smoke, started seeing smoke, so I pulled over,” Brown told CNN. “As soon as I pulled over, one of the ladies hops through the partition.”

Brown said two other cars pulled over and their drivers tried to help, but by the time the rear door was opened it was already too late for the women who had been trapped inside the passenger compartment.

“It was horrific, just something that I never would have imagined to have happened,” he said.

Brown told CNN that he was not aware of any mechanical issues with the limo and didn’t know what had caused the fire.

Foster City Fire Department investigator John Mapes told Reuters he had interviewed two of the surviving women, who told him they had escaped the flames by climbing through the small window in the partition. Mapes said the limousine was still intact but badly damaged by fire.

The Chronicle reported that Fojas, a registered nurse who worked at a Fresno hospital, was heading to a bridal celebration at a hotel in Foster City where her husband was waiting. The couple was also planning to travel to her native Philippines next month for another ceremony with her family.

The five women died on the same day that a 26-year-old woman was killed after falling out of a bachelorette party bus onto a busy Kansas freeway and was struck by at least three vehicles.

Jamie N. Frecks was one of 17 women, including the bride-to-be, riding on the bus when she fell out of a side door.

(Writing and additional reporting by Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles; Editing by Ellen Wulfhorst, Cynthia Johnston, Sofina Mirza-Reid, Leslie Adler and Richard Chang)

Read more: Reuters

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