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Quaker Oats Package Left at a Queens Home Explodes, Severely Burning a Man A 73-Year-Old Man Is Severely Burned in Queens by an Exploding Container
(35 minutes later)
A 73-year-old man was severely burned on Friday after he opened an oatmeal container that had been left at a home in Queens and it exploded, the police said.A 73-year-old man was severely burned on Friday after he opened an oatmeal container that had been left at a home in Queens and it exploded, the police said.
The man, whose name was not immediately released, had second- and third-degree burns to 80 percent of his torso and legs and was taken to Nassau University Medical Center, where he was in critical condition, Robert K. Boyce, the chief of detectives, said on Twitter.The man, whose name was not immediately released, had second- and third-degree burns to 80 percent of his torso and legs and was taken to Nassau University Medical Center, where he was in critical condition, Robert K. Boyce, the chief of detectives, said on Twitter.
The explosive was a “victim-actuated device,” with the explosion caused by opening the cylindrical package, Chief Boyce said. The blast, which was reported around 4:15 p.m., left behind “substantial evidence,” he said.The explosive was a “victim-actuated device,” with the explosion caused by opening the cylindrical package, Chief Boyce said. The blast, which was reported around 4:15 p.m., left behind “substantial evidence,” he said.
The explosive was in a Quaker Oats container left on the porch of a home on the 100 block of 222nd Street in the Brookville neighborhood of Queens, the police said.The explosive was in a Quaker Oats container left on the porch of a home on the 100 block of 222nd Street in the Brookville neighborhood of Queens, the police said.
“We consider this a low-explosive; there was no shrapnel associated with this device,” Chief Boyce said. Officials described the explosive as being in a package, but it was not clear whether the container was inside a package or left on its own. “We consider this a low-explosive; there was no shrapnel associated with this device,” Chief Boyce posted. Officials described the explosive as being in a package, but it was not clear whether the container was inside a package or left on its own.
Donna Harris, a spokeswoman for the New York division of the United States Postal Inspection Service, said on Friday night that the agency was helping in the investigation, but that it did not appear that the device had been sent through the mail.Donna Harris, a spokeswoman for the New York division of the United States Postal Inspection Service, said on Friday night that the agency was helping in the investigation, but that it did not appear that the device had been sent through the mail.
A woman who identified herself as the wife of the victim, but who did not give her name, said in a phone interview that her husband was a retired hospital worker and that she knew of no one who would want to harm him.A woman who identified herself as the wife of the victim, but who did not give her name, said in a phone interview that her husband was a retired hospital worker and that she knew of no one who would want to harm him.
She said detectives told her that he was talking and was aware of what was happening. Property records list the man as the homeowner, but the woman said that they did not live at the house and that tenants there were safely evacuated.She said detectives told her that he was talking and was aware of what was happening. Property records list the man as the homeowner, but the woman said that they did not live at the house and that tenants there were safely evacuated.
“At this point, I know nothing,” she said on Friday night.“At this point, I know nothing,” she said on Friday night.