upset doctors - photo courtesy of PeopleImages on shutterstock
upset doctors - photo courtesy of PeopleImages on shutterstock

A second person, the 24-year-old brother of a teenager whose body was found earlier, has died from injuries suffered in an apparent homemade fireworks explosion and fire at an apartment complex in Bell Gardens that left one other person injured.

Crews from the Los Angeles County Fire Department were called at 6:08 p.m. Tuesday to the 6500 block of Purdy Avenue, south of East Gage Avenue, where they encountered heavy flames at the two-story complex following the explosion, according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

Firefighters extinguished the flames shortly before 7:10 p.m. The second floor of the complex appeared to have significant damage, with a large section of the front missing and parts of the roof collapsed, video from the scene showed.

A boy and a man were rushed to a hospital. The child was treated and released and the man was hospitalized in critical condition, according to the fire department.

A resident told reporters at the scene the man appeared to be badly burned.

Family members speaking to reporters identified the deceased teenager as 13-year-old Carlos Hernandez and the man who died at a hospital as his brother, Christopher Benitez.

“During their initial investigation and processing of the scene, (investigators) observed materials consistent with homemade explosives and fireworks,” according to an LASD statement, which said the incident appears to be isolated “and there is no threat to the community.”

About 60 firefighters took roughly an hour to put out the fire, which was visible from several blocks away.

Emilio Guerrero, who lives in the area, said he saw “a big ball of fire” following the explosion.

Several families from the complex were displaced by the fire, and the American Red Cross assisted them with temporary housing, officials said.

The case remained under investigation by the Sheriff’s Homicide Bureau and the sheriff’s Arson Explosives Detail.

The explosion was being treated as a tragic accident, though investigators believe the brothers were assembling a homemade firework or explosive device when the blast occurred, a sheriff’s investigator said Thursday at a news conference outside the apartment building.

Anyone with information about the explosion was urged to contact the sheriff’s Arson Explosives Detail at 323-881-7500. Anonymous tips can be submitted through Crime Stoppers at 800-222-TIPS (8477) or online at lacrimestoppers.org.

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