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[URL]http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/3526436.stm[/URL]
[URL]http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/3526436.stm[/URL]
It's just a terrible incident.
It's unlikely they knew something terrible like this would come of it, but if it's true it's involuntary manslaughter.
> It's unlikely they knew something terrible like this would come of
> it, but if it's true it's involuntary manslaughter.
I hope that none of it's intentional, the media haven't really made it clear at this stage - as reports remain unconfirmerd.
> I'm wondering if,as is often the case, the story has gotten confused
> by the media and that the actual truth is that the fire doors were
> always locked to prevent shoplifters dashing through them. In which
> case someone is still in deep brown stuff.
That's how I understood it when it was on the news last night. They said it was to "prevent looting" which I initially thought meant they had locked the doors *because* of the fire, but at the piece went on it hinted that it was a more permanent arrangement.
Like you say, either way some one is screwed.