Grenfell Tower fire death toll may be lower than 80

Police in London have identified 60 victims of the blaze so far

FILE - This is a Thursday, June 15, 2017 file photo of The scorched facade of the Grenfell Tower in London after a massive fire raced through the 24-storey high-rise apartment building in west London. British police said Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2017, the number of people who died in the Grenfell Tower fire in west London may be slightly lower than the 80 previously estimated.  (AP Photo/Frank Augstein/File)
Powered by automated translation

The number of people who died in London's Grenfell Tower fire may be slightly lower than the 80 previously estimated, police said on Tuesday, also announcing that individuals may face manslaughter charges over the blaze.

Metropolitan Police Commander Stuart Cundy said the final figure might "come down a little," but will not be known until police have completed a painstaking search of the charred building. He said that so far 60 victims of the June 14 blaze have been formally identified.

Police also said for the first time on Tuesday that they will consider manslaughter charges against individuals over the fire. The force has previously said it has "reasonable grounds" to suspect local authorities may have committed corporate manslaughter.

_______________

Read more:

_______________

Detectives are also investigating eight cases of fraud involving people who claimed to have relatives or property in the building.

Updating reporters on the investigation, Detective Chief Inspector Matt Bonner said the investigation would deal with "whatever offenses come to light."

"The kind of stuff I would envisage we may come across would involve offenses perhaps of fraud, misconduct offenses, health and safety breaches, breaches of fire safety regulations, and of course offenses of manslaughter, whether that be on a corporate or an individual level," he said.

The blaze began in a refrigerator in an apartment at Grenfell Tower before racing through the 24-story building. A public inquiry — separate from the police investigation — has begun to find out how a small fire was able to spread so quickly, becoming Britain's deadliest blaze in decades.

Many residents accuse officials in Kensington and Chelsea, one of London's richest boroughs, of ignoring their safety concerns because the public-housing block was home to a largely immigrant and working-class population.

One focus of investigation is the role of combustible aluminium cladding installed during a refurbishment to the 1970s tower block. Emergency safety checks have uncovered scores of other buildings across Britain with similar cladding.

The disaster has prompted an outpouring of emotion, with donations of money and clothes pouring in from around Britain, but there have also been a small number of incidents of people trying to profit from the tragedy.

Detective Superintendent Fiona McCormack, who is leading search and recovery operations said police were investigating one confirmed theft of "a considerable amount" of money from one of the less damaged apartments at the bottom of the tower, and three other suspected thefts of residents' possessions were also being probed.

These came to light when former residents were let into their flats to pick up treasured items and to say goodbye to their homes.

Extra alarms, cameras and lights have now been installed in the tower and procedures to access the site have been strengthened.