Family ‘devastated’ By Conn. Christmas House Fire
Topics: From the Wires, News
FILE - In this Dec. 27, 2011 file photo, Stamford firefighter Nick Tamburro pays respects outside the Stamford, Conn., home of Madonna Badger, which was destroyed by a fire on Christmas morning. The Connecticut medical examiner said Wednesday, Dec. 28, that Badger's three daughters and her parents died of smoke inhalation. All the deaths were ruled accidental. Firefighters went into the house twice trying to rescue the victims, but were forced out by the blazes intensity. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill, File)(Credit: AP)STAMFORD, Conn. (AP) — An uncle of three girls killed with their grandparents in a Christmas morning house fire said Wednesday family members are devastated by the tragedy but comforted by each other and an outpouring of public sympathy.
Campbell Badger said that his brother Matthew Badger was devoted to his daughters. He says their family appreciates the prayers and support it has received.
“Matthew is devastated,” Campbell Badger said Wednesday. “He’s doing as best as can be expected under the circumstances.”
Matthew Badger hasn’t commented publicly since 10-year-old Lily and 7-year-old twins Grace and Sarah died of smoke inhalation along with their mother’s parents, Lomer and Pauline Johnson.
Lomer Johnson also suffered a blunt head and neck trauma, which could have resulted from a fall or being hit by an object, according to the medical examiner.
Matthew Badger and the girls’ mother, Madonna Badger, are divorcing, and he was not at the home when it was engulfed by flames.
Authorities say embers in a bag of discarded fireplace ashes started the blaze.
Madonna Badger, an advertising executive and the home’s owner, escaped from the fire, as did Michael Borcina, a friend and contractor working on the house. Borcina was released from a hospital on Wednesday morning, a spokeswoman said.
As flames shot from the three-story home, Madonna Badger climbed out a window onto scaffolding, screaming for her children and pointing to the third floor.
Firefighters went into the house twice trying to rescue the victims but were forced out by the blaze’s intensity.
Borcina and Lomer Johnson, a department store Santa Claus who spent a long career as safety and security director for a Louisville, Ky.-based liquor company, tried to save them, as well. One of the girls, found dead just inside a window, had been placed on a pile of books, apparently so Johnson could reach in and grab her after he jumped out.
Instead, authorities say, Johnson fell through the roof outside the window and was found dead in the rear of the house. He and his wife, both of Southbury, had been visiting their daughter for the holidays.
A Badger family and Johnson family statement issued by Madonna Badger’s brother on Wednesday night said they wanted to express their thoughts and prayers for the people who’ve been “so deeply impacted by the tragedy on Christmas morning.”




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