Trending Topics

‘It sounded like a bomb': 12 rescued in Detroit apartment explosion

Occupants were trying to jump from windows when Detroit firefighters arrived at the early-morning explosion

By Kate Linderman
The Charlotte Observer

DETROIT — Twelve people, including six children, were pulled from an apartment building after an early morning explosion, Michigan fire officials said.

People were attempting to jump from the windows of the two-story building in Detroit when firefighters arrived around 4 a.m. on March 31, according to WDIV.

Three people, who were all in the same apartment, suffered severe burns and were in critical condition, Detroit Fire Commissioner Chuck Simms said in a news conference posted by WXYZ.

A 30-year-old man had severe burns on 90% of his body, a 27-year-old woman was in critical condition with severe burns, and a 3-year-old girl suffered severe burns to 15% of her body, fire officials told WXYZ.

Simms said the cause of the explosion is unknown, but officials will focus their investigation into the unit where the three suffered severe burns.

“I thought it was just somebody had crashed into the building literally, but then you look at it and there’s no fire, there’s none of that,” Steffen Moore, a resident of the building, told WJBK. “It sounded like a bomb.”

Many residents across the Detroit area woke up to an emergency alert regarding the explosion, which happened on the west side of the city, WJBK reported.

Fire officials told the outlet the alert was accidentally sent across the city but was only meant to go to those in the zip code where the explosion occurred.

Demolition of the building is set to begin, Simms said during the news conference. Four residents were escorted into the building to obtain their personal belongings, he added.

Simms confirmed that there are no more occupants in the building.

©2025 The Charlotte Observer.
Visit charlotteobserver.com.
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Trending
Teams made up of EMTs, mental health professionals and peers would be stationed in 100 subway stations, focusing on engaging New Yorkers experiencing homelessness or mental distress
Worcester Polytechnic Institute researchers are developing palm-sized, echolocating drones able to navigate smoke, fog and darkness
Firefighters, technical rescue crews and a heavy wrecker spent two hours stabilizing a collapsed second floor and lifting the tree
A statement from Professional Firefighters of Keene IAFF Local 3265 said the firefighters were cut off by fire while searching the second floor