
Four people hurt when an explosion ripped through a Pennsylvania nursing home two weeks ago sued the facility and a natural gas utility on Monday, claiming their negligence was to blame.
Two workers at Bristol Health & Rehab Center LLC, a resident of the suburban Philadelphia facility and a contractor who happened to be there when the blast occurred on Dec. 23 filed the lawsuit. The defendants include PECO Energy Company, which provided natural gas to the complex, its parent company Exelon Corp., and Saber Healthcare Holdings LLC of Beachwood, Ohio.
The lawsuit filed in Philadelphia court claims the defendants “were aware of a gas leak in the building and failed to take the steps necessary to evacuate the building, fix the leak and protect the residents, workers and others that were exposed to the horrific blast.”
Zach Shamberg, Saber Healthcare Group chief of government affairs, said in an email Monday that the company is cooperating with the ongoing investigation and does not comment on litigation.
PECO communications director Greg Smore said in an email that as a party to an investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board, the company was not permitted to comment. The gas utility has previously said the cause is under investigation and it’s not known whether PECO’s equipment or natural gas were involved.
The explosion killed a resident and a worker and injured 20 other people. Officials have not said what caused it, but a PECO crew had been there to investigate a reported gas leak.
The lawsuit claims the gas leak “had been festering for days” and the gas odor came from the boiler room.
“Defendants' decision not to immediately initiate evacuation procedures under these circumstances was reckless and outrageous given the population within the building, with many of the residents having limited mobility and unable to self-evacuate in the case of an emergency,” the lawsuit alleged.
A utility crew was responding to reports of a gas odor when the explosion happened, authorities have said.
Authorities reported acts of heroism in response to the explosion. About 100 residents were taken to other nursing homes nearby, officials said.
One of the people who died was Muthoni Nduthu, 52, a Kenyan immigrant who worked there. The other victim was a resident whose name has not been made public.
The force of the blast shook nearby houses for blocks in Bristol, about 20 miles (32 kilometers) northeast of Philadelphia.
latest_posts
- 1
Farmers call for French blockades over cow disease cull - 2
Pick Your #1 breakfast food - 3
Tasting America: An Excursion Through Darling Cheap Food Brands - 4
We may have one thing in common with jellyfish, new research finds - 5
L.A.'s most famous midcentury home, the Stahl House, is on the market for the 1st time, at $11K per square foot: See inside
NASA's SPHEREx telescope completes its 1st cosmic map of the entire sky and it's stunning!
Rebecca Gayheart on her 'very complicated' relationship with Eric Dane: 'I am always going to want the best for him'
6 Famous Urban communities for Shopping on the planet
1st-ever disease gene fix, Alzheimer's blood test: 7 medical breakthroughs in 2025
FDA official discusses potential link between COVID-19 vaccines and pediatric deaths
Productive CRM Programming for Client Relationship The executives
SpaceX shatters its rocket launch record yet again — 165 orbital flights in 2025
Instructions to Pick the Best Album Rates for Your Investment funds
James Webb Space Telescope watches 'Jekyll and Hyde' galaxy shapeshift into a cosmic monster













