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Eaton fire victim pushes for more CA utility equipment to be examined

Lawyers for a lady who lost her home in the Los Angelesarea Eaton Fire filed an emergency situation demand late on Thursday for Southern California Edison to protect extra electrical equipment to be taken a look at in blaze examinations, court filings show.

Several fires that started to burn and rapidly spread across Los Angeles in strong Santa Ana wind gusts last week have killed more than 2 dozen individuals and charred some 40,000 acres of the second-largest U.S. city location.

While main detectives have not launched the reason for the Eaton Fire near Pasadena, residents and company owner with ruined residential or commercial property have actually filed lawsuits accusing SCE power infrastructure of triggering the initial flames.

Evangeline Iglesias, who is amongst those taking legal action against SCE after her Altadena home was annihilated in the inferno, asked the Los Angeles Superior Court to stop efforts by SCE to ruin some distribution lines and other electrical devices in the burn area, according to court files.

A representative with SCE said the company is focused on restoring power to impacted locations. The company stated it is aware of lawsuits connected to the Eaton Fire and will review them.

SCE, which is the primary subsidiary of Edison International, formerly stated that it protected some power devices to be analyzed in fire investigations.

The law practice representing Iglesias, Edelson PC, stated in the filings that SCE informed the firm in letters that it planned to imminently get rid of physical power facilities in the burn area unless told particularly which devices to keep.

That level of uniqueness, Edelson argued in its emergency situation request to the court, was unreasonable, particularly where most or all of that proof is owned by SCE and where SCE has unique knowledge of the fire's origin and spread, the filings revealed.

Numerous investigations into the cause of the Eaton and Palisades fires-- the 2 most harmful fires in California -- are ongoing.

(source: Reuters)