A quiet residential street in New York City was rocked Friday morning after a plumber’s truck violently exploded.

Footage captured the moment an unoccupied Infiniti QX56 unleashed a fireball in South Ozone Park, Queens, at approximately 6:45 a.m.

WATCH:

The explosion damaged several homes and nearby cars, sending shrapnel into houses.

From the New York Post:

Shocked residents were seen gawking at the burning vehicle — with many assuming the constant popping of mini explosions was from fireworks kept in the vehicle.

However, the explosion appears to have actually been caused by pressurized gas cylinders that were kept in the work truck, according to FDNY Deputy Chief George Healy.

There were also several lithium ion batteries inside the truck, which were safely dealt with by the hazmat unit at the scene, Healy said.

Photos showed the vehicle completely burned out in the street. At least six homes were left with broken windows, and five vehicles parked near the flaming car were also damaged.

There were no reported injuries.

The truck’s owner, Dinell Harricharan, was at his home on Long Island when the explosion occurred, he told The Post.

Harricharan told the New York Post he parked the truck overnight at his younger brother’s house, which he uses for his plumbing business.

“The car’s our lifeline,” he told the outlet.

“We have to start over, try to finance and get everything back together,” he added.

ABC7 New York reports:

The car is owned by a plumber, Dinell Harricharan, who keeps natural gas and acetylene tanks in the vehicle. He said his brother and mother were planning on getting in the car right after the time it exploded.

Harricharan said his 2011 Infiniti has a sensitive alarm system, and he believes it could have been triggered by a passing car, sparking the explosion.

“Sometimes cars will go by and it won’t go off, it will just chirp,” he said.

Harricharan wasn’t home at the time of the explosion and was shocked when he saw the damage.

“We just have natural gas for the business, but we didn’t think anything was leaking because we always secure the tank and make sure it’s closed,” he said. “We learned it’s not safe to have it in the car.”

He said he’s just grateful that no one was hurt.

“Lucky, glad that no one was injured, and that no one was passing by that was injured,” Harricharan said.

WATCH:

RELATED REPORT:

Maryland House Explodes, Leaving Two Dead

Maryland House Explodes, Leaving Two Dead

Two people have died after a house exploded in Harford County, Maryland, on Sunday.

According to authorities, a Baltimore Gas and Electric Company contractor and a 73-year-old homeowner were killed in the blast.

On Sunday morning, the fire department was called to the house to respond to a gas leak.

Before Fire officials arrived on the scene, the house exploded.

Here was the aftermath:

Here’s what CNN reported:

Two people have died after an apparent house explosion early Sunday in Harford County, Maryland, northeast of Baltimore, officials said in a post on X Sunday night.

A Baltimore Gas and Electric Company contractor and a 73-year-old homeowner were killed in the incident, a spokesperson with the county’s Volunteer Fire and EMS Association told CNN.

Officials initially reported one person dead and two injured on Sunday, before finding another person dead beneath the rubble.

The fire department was initially requested to respond to a gas leak around 6:42 a.m. ET outside the home on Arthurs Woods Drive in Bel Air, where authorities found a victim dead, Oliver Alkire of the Maryland State Fire Marshal’s Office said during a news conference Sunday.

“However, as they were approaching the scene, they received multiple other phone calls stating that … this gas leak has been turned into … a house explosion,” Alkire said. The blast displaced at least 12 families, authorities say.

There was an odor of gas in the area and the Baltimore Gas and Electric Company was aware, according to Alkire.

Per Fox 5 DC:

Two people were killed after a home in Harford County, Maryland exploded Sunday morning, officials say.

Harford County fire crews and EMS responded to the home in the 2300 block of Arthur Woods Drive in Bel Air around 7 a.m. after the home exploded.

Crews immediately began searching for victims and residents were asked to stay away from the area. Volunteer firefighters and Harford County special operations teams eventually found one victim who was pronounced dead at the scene. Investigators have since revealed that the victim was a 35-year-old BGE contractor who was at the home to check out a gas issue.

Oddly enough, it’s not the first (or even second or third time) recently that a house has suddenly exploded like this.

Remember this?

House Suddenly EXPLODES in Arlington, VA, As Police Approach With Search Warrant

File this under the strangest thing you will see all day!

I’m going to tell you everything we know so far….and then I’m going to tell you I expect there is MUCH more to this story that we don’t yet know (and perhaps never will).

Something VERY strange happening here.

Here’s the short story….a house in Arlington, VA suddenly exploded last night, and it was reported that the police were either currently serving a search warrant or were approaching the house in order to serve a search warrant.

We’re talking blockbuster movie-type stuff here.

Watch:

FULL VIDEO:

That’s an explosion that would make Michael Bay impressed!

“HOLY CRAP” would be an understatement:

Sees like it *was* a nice house:

Here are more details from ABC News:

A house in Arlington, Virginia, exploded Monday night, shortly after officers were executing a search warrant at the residence for reports of a person discharging several rounds with a flare gun, officials said during a press conference.

Police responded to a residence on the 800 block of North Burlington Street at approximately 4:45 p.m. Monday afternoon with reports of possible shots fired, said Ashley Savage, public information officer with Arlington County Police Department.

“The suspect inside the residence discharged several rounds. The house subsequently exploded,” Savage said.

Police officers sustained minor injuries and were treated on scene. Before the explosion, Savage said that a barricade situation took place after attempts to make contact with the suspect were unsuccessful.

“During the early parts of it, after we had obtained a search warrant, we were attempting to make contact with the individual. Our SWAT team was on scene at that point, we would determine that the incident would be a barricade because the suspect had not exited the residence,” she said. “We were attempting to make contact with the individual when shots were discharged inside the residence.”

Here’s an interview with the man who recorded the video:

And from NBC News:

The suspect inside an Arlington, Virginia, home that went up in flames Monday night as police tried to execute a search warrant has been identified as resident James Yoo, 56, and is presumed to be dead, Arlington County Police Chief Andy Penn said.

“Human remains have been located at the scene. The office of the Chief Medical Examiner will work to positively identify the individual and cause and manner of death,” Penn told reporters at a Tuesday news conference.

Authorities said during the news conference they are investigating what the cause and origin of the explosion was.

There is no ongoing threat to the nearby community, the police chief said, adding this will be a thorough and extensive probe and authorities will also look into “concerning social media posts” allegedly made by the suspect.

Yoo listed his address in multiple LinkedIn posts, which are filled with rambling and at times incoherent conspiracy theories against government officials, law enforcement, media outlets and, in one post from Friday, his neighbors who he accused of being spies and collecting his information for unnamed handlers.

The FBI is assisting in the investigation into the explosion and the suspect, said David Sundberg, assistant director in charge of the agency’s Washington field office.

Yoo had previously communicated with the FBI through phone calls, online tips and letters “over a number of years,” Sundberg said.

“I would characterize these communications as primarily complaints about alleged frauds he believed were perpetrated against him,” he added. The information the suspect shared and his communications with the agency did not lead the FBI to open any investigations, Sundberg said.

The explosion prompted the evacuation of several nearby houses, officials said.

The blast destroyed the home as law enforcement were trying to make contact with the suspect inside. Authorities believe the man had been firing a flare gun from his home earlier in the day, Arlington County Police Department spokesperson Ashley Savage said.

Do you trust this “witness”?

When I first saw this story it immediately made me think of this from a few months ago:

WATCH: House Suddenly EXPLODES In Plum, PA

This is something you don’t see every day….

Gas leak?

Meth?

Bomb?

DEW?

No reports yet on exactly what caused it, but wow….

Take a look:

Reports say 4 people are dead and multiple properties have been damaged:

Total destruction:

The AP reports the following:

Four people were dead and a fifth was unaccounted for following a house explosion in western Pennsylvania that destroyed three structures and damaged at least a dozen others Saturday morning, authorities said.

Allegheny County officials said three people were taken to hospitals after the blast shortly before 10:30 a.m. in the borough of Plum, about 20 miles (32 kilometers) east of Pittsburgh.

Three people were transported to area hospitals, including one who was listed in critical condition and two who were treated and released. More than 20 firefighters were evaluated, many for heat exhaustion, authorities said.

The Allegheny County Medical Examiner’s Office was expected to provide additional information about the deceased victims.

Emergency officials suspended operations Saturday night due to weather and concern for the safety of investigators. Crews were expected to resume working at the site on Sunday morning.

Emergency responders reported people trapped under debris after one house apparently exploded and two others were engulfed in flames, county spokesperson Amie Downs said.

Similar explosions have happened recently elsewhere.

In Dunbar:

And Plano:

https://twitter.com/MzJJBlues/status/1690731959125671936

But the strangest thing is that this does not appear to be the only explosion in Plum:

Six in one township?

What?

From TribLive:

There have been at least two previous house explosions in Plum since 2008, both in the Holiday Park neighborhood.

The most recent was April 22, 2022, at 5021 Hialeah Drive. A couple and their three sons who lived there survived.

As of September, the cause of the explosion had not been released.

Matt Brown, chief of the Allegheny County Department of Emergency Services, said in an email Saturday that the investigation has been lengthy because of forensic testing of natural gas lines and appliances and follow-up interviews. He said all of that requires extensive planning and coordination.

A March 2008 house explosion on Mardi Gras Drive was eerily similar in its destruction to Saturday’s incident on Rustic Ridge Drive.

In that incident, when the house at 171 Mardi Gras exploded, two others were destroyed and 11 were damaged.

A grandfather, Richard Leith, 64, of Trafford, was killed and his granddaughter, Gianna, then 4, suffered a broken leg.

A National Transportation Safety Board investigation found that a 2-inch natural gas distribution pipeline had been hit by a backhoe when a sewer line was replaced five years prior in 2003, stripping the pipeline of its protective coating and making it susceptible to corrosion and failure.

Very strange…

 

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