NEW YORK – New York City is conducting a rigorous investigation into a freak radiator accident that led to the deaths of two toddler sisters, Mayor Bill de Blasio said Thursday.
The two babies had moved with their parents to the city from Houlton, Maine, about a year ago, WCSH TV reported Thursday.
In New York, a “pained silence” filled the air when officials – surrounded by children’s drawings, symbols of a loving household – visited the Bronx apartment where 2-year-old Ibanez Ambrose and her 1-year-old sister, Scylee, were fatally injured Wednesday, the mayor said.
Something happened with a radiator valve, releasing an extraordinary amount of steam, said the mayor, who called it “horribly, horribly tragic.”
“In almost 30 years of inspections I’ve never once seen anything like this,” said buildings commissioner Rick Chandler. “…I’ve never heard of a radiator blowing out, particularly with a low-pressure boiler.”
The building was recently inspected, and there were no reports of anything major wrong, the officials said.
Homeless Services Commissioner Steven Banks said an inspector from his department was in the apartment where the two children died as recently as Monday and observed nothing problematic.
The privately owned building was used to house homeless people; four other families were moved out as a precaution.
The city was already working to phase out the so-called cluster-site housing, but the mayor said there’s no indication the deaths were related to the program.
Family members told WCSH that the girls’ parents were Danielle McGuire-Ambrose and Peter Ambrose.
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