icon-folder.gif   Conference Reports for NATAP  
 
  Digestive Disease Week
San Diego CA
May 17-22, 2008
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Explosion Disrupts Digestive Disease Week Meeting
 
 
  Debris hangs from a damaged section of the Hilton Hotel under construction where an explosion ripped through the floors Monday May 19, 2008 in San Diego. The explosion felt throughout downtown rocked the hotel under construction and 13 workers were injured, five critically, authorities said. (AP Photo/Denis Poroy)
 

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By Denis Poroy (AP)
Published: 2008-05-19 20:25:02
Location: SAN DIEGO
 
An apparently accidental explosion rocked a Hilton hotel under construction Monday, injuring 13 workers, five of them critically, authorities said.
 
Three of the five in critical condition were in a hospital burn unit and eight other victims had serious-to-minor injuries, fire department spokesman Maurice Luque said.
 
Some workers were burned and others were injured by flying debris, Luque said. The building did not burn after the explosion, which Luque said appeared to be accidental.
 
San Diego Deputy Fire-Rescue Chief Perry Peake said the blast occurred in an area of the building containing gas, electric and other utilities and that it appears to have been caused by a mechanical failure.
 
"We want to rule out all possibilities before making an official report, but we're pretty confident that's how it's going to come out," he said.
 
The blast damaged floors four through seven of the building, Mayor Jerry Sanders said.
 
The hotel near the San Diego Convention Center showed serious damage and debris littered a driveway beneath one corner of the structure. Facade material dangled from the structure, drapes dangled out windows, and a large equipment room with tanks and pipes was left exposed.
 
Firefighters searched the building to determine if there were any other victims. More than 400 construction workers were at the site at the time, Sanders said.
 
Matt McBride, general manager of the Tin Fish bar about 150 yards away, said he was setting up the outdoor patio bar when the explosion happened. He said he and other workers froze as they saw smoke come out of the building but no flames.
 
"It looked like a bomb," McBride said. "It shook the whole building like a bomb. The reverb was what scared us. Everybody was saying bomb, bomb, bomb, terrorist, terrorist, terrorist."
 
UCSD Medical Center in San Diego was treating nine injured, including three in the burn unit, said Kimberly Edwards, a hospital spokeswoman.
 
The site was surrounded by firefighters and utility crews, and a truck with the markings of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives arrived.
 
The Padres baseball team, which plays at Petco Park across from the convention center, planned to host the St. Louis Cardinals Monday night, as scheduled, said Sandy Alderson, the team's chief executive officer.
 
Bruce Ragland, who runs an entry gate at the stadium, said he was looking right at the building when the explosion blew through two sides and there was a strong shock wave.
 
"It was just like watching a Bruce Willis movie, like you know, 'Die Hard,'" Ragland said.
 
The 30-story Hilton San Diego Bayfront hotel was scheduled to open by the end of this year, according to Hilton's Web site. It will have 1,190 rooms and more than 165,000 square feet of meeting space.
 
By Peggy Peck, Executive Editor, MedPage Today
Published: May 19, 2008
 

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SAN DIEGO, May 19 -- Thousands of gastroenterologists and others attending Digestive Disease Week sessions were jolted today by an explosion that reverberated through the San Diego Convention Center.
 
Shortly after 2 p.m. Pacific time, the explosion ripped through a hotel construction site opposite the convention center where the DDW meeting is underway. The blast caused structural damage to the convention center and officials here cordoned off one end of the building, but declared the building itself secure, and said there was no need to evacuate.
 
The cause of the blast at the new Hilton Hotel was not certain, but two weeks ago a pipe bomb exploded at the federal court house here.
 
San Diego officials said 13 people were hospitalized with injuries sustained in the blast, including five who are in critical condition.
 

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