Arizona Public Radio | Your Source for NPR News
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Community mourns 5 children killed in Bull Head City house fire, cause under investigation

Flowers, stuffed animals and candles are placed on and along a chain-link fence in a makeshift memorial outside the Bullhead City, Ariz., duplex where five children were killed in a fire on Saturday, Dec. 16, 2023. Authorities have yet to determine what caused the house fire.
Bill McMillen/Mohave Valley Daily News
/
AP
Flowers, stuffed animals and candles are placed on and along a chain-link fence in a makeshift memorial outside the Bullhead City, Ariz., duplex where five children were killed in a fire on Saturday, Dec. 16, 2023. Authorities have yet to determine what caused the house fire.

Authorities have yet to determine what caused a house fire in Bullhead City that left five children dead. Police say the fire broke out Saturday evening while the father of four of the victims was away buying groceries and Christmas gifts.

Their bodies were all found in an upstairs bedroom, investigators said.

Bullhead City police did not immediately release the names of the children pending identification by the medical examiner. They included a 4-year-old girl and her three brothers — ages 2, 5 and 13 — and an 11-year-old boy who was a family relative and visiting at the time.

City Mayor Steve D'Amico, in a video statement Tuesday, said the tragedy has shaken the close-knit community near the Colorado River and the Nevada border.

"I have seen the flowers, the stuffed animals and the candles" lining the chainlink fence in front of the home, D'Amico added.

Patrick O'Neal was among the neighbors who rushed over after seeing smoke coming out of the home. He said about a dozen men gathered hoses and broke windows to try to get into the burning house. At the time, they didn't know if anyone was home.

"We were screaming at the tops of our lungs," O'Neal told reporters Monday. "We didn't see nothing. We didn't hear nothing. There are many guys out here who would have went into that fire if we would have known there was children ... We did everything we could."

The cause of the fire is being investigated by police and a local fire department along with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

Bullhead City Police Chief Robert Trebes said investigators were working to get answers about the cause to "bring some closure and peace to parents and families involved."

A memorial vigil for the five children was scheduled for Wednesday night at Rotary Park while friends of the families have raised more than $11,000 as of Tuesday to help with funeral expenses.