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Driver describes deadly limo fire: ‘Pull over, pull over’

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NBC San Diego – In an emotional interview, the driver of the limousine where nine women were on their way to a Bay Area bridal shower on Saturday, described how fast the flames engulfed the white Lincoln Town Car he was driving when five women died.

“There were too many flames,” Orville Brown, 46, of Oakland and a driver for Limo Stop, said on Monday in an interview with NBC Bay Area. “The flames were just bursting. When the (women) opened the door, it oxygenated the fire, and it spread so fast.”

Brown was picking up nine women on Saturday before 10 p.m. in Alameda and heading toward Foster City for a bachelorette party, when his limo caught fire for unknown reasons on Saturday, and claimed the lives of five women, including the bride.

The victim’s sister-in-law, Lovela Nicolas, identified the bride as Neriza Fojas.A family member told NBC Bay Area she was recently married here in the United States, but she was also planning a wedding in the Philippines on June 19.

As of Monday morning, Valley Medical Center in San Jose said that Jasmine Desguia, 34, of San Jose and Amalia Loyola, 48, of San Leandro were still in critical condition. Stanford Medical Center would not discuss the details of  Mary G. Guardiano, 42, of Alameda.

Neila Arrellano, 36, who was released from Stanford Medical Center, and who is a nurse who works at the Fruitvale Health Center in Oakland, described through tears that she was yelling at Brown to pull over.

“Stop the car, stop the car,” she recalled telling Brown. “I told you, there is smoke.”

She said her friends were heading to the Crowne Plaza in Foster City for a “wedding celebration,” because it was supposed to be a night of “fun.”

The San Mateo County Coroner has not yet released the names of the other victims.

Brown called all the women “beautiful,” and that when he went to go pick them up, he was honored and excited for them to have a wonderful night.

“Everything was fine,” he said. “The music was on, they were having fun.”

At some point, one of the women told him there was “smoke,” but he didn’t realize the car was on fire. He thought she wanted a cigarette, and he didn’t immediately respond to the emergency.

Then he saw the panic and “grief” on her face and he started dialing 911, but had trouble because his hands were shaking so badly.

“It was horrific,” he said. “The flames were so high. I didn’t know how to explain it. It was a weird situation. I’ve never been in one like that before.”

He said the flames started spewing odors, such as plastic, rubber and wood. “It was a nasty, toxic smell,” he said.

He added that he wished there was a law that required fire departments to have substations on bridges. It seemed to take forever for firefighters to arrive because they had to circle back on the San Mateo Bridge to help.

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