North America

Queens man burned by exploding parcel dies; Police press search for sender

A Queens homeowner who opened a package that was left on his porch died on Tuesday, four days after he was badly burned when the container exploded in his hands, the police said.

The homeowner, George Wray, was severely burned Friday when he opened the package, which had been left atop the steps of his duplex on 222nd Street in the Brookville neighborhood, and the police were continuing to search on Wednesday for whoever sent it. The police said they did not believe the package was intended for Mr. Wray.

“We will not know motive until we have a target,” Robert K. Boyce, the chief of detectives, said at a news conference on Tuesday.

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A Queens homeowner who opened a package that was left on his porch died on Tuesday, four days after he was badly burned when the container exploded in his hands, the police said.

The homeowner, George Wray, was severely burned Friday when he opened the package, which had been left atop the steps of his duplex on 222nd Street in the Brookville neighborhood, and the police were continuing to search on Wednesday for whoever sent it. The police said they did not believe the package was intended for Mr. Wray.

“We will not know motive until we have a target,” Robert K. Boyce, the chief of detectives, said at a news conference on Tuesday.

Mr. Wray, 73, sustained second-degree burns over 80 percent of his body when the package, a foot-long cardboard tube containing flash powder, blew up, the police said. Flash powder is a low-grade explosive commonly used in stage productions like plays and concerts.

“Flash powder is something used in pyrotechnics,” Chief Boyce said. “It creates an incendiary flame. That’s what covered Mr. Wray.”

Read the whole story from The New York Times.

Featured image courtesy of the US Postal Museum

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