NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) - Thousands of firefighters from across the nation and Canada poured into South Carolina to attend a memorial service Friday for nine of their own killed in a furniture store blaze. As bagpipers rehearsed in a parking lot, a long processions of about 100 fire trucks began winding through the streets lined with mourners, past the gutted store and city firehouses. Monday night's fire and the roof collapse at the Sofa Super Store created the single largest loss of firefighters' lives since the Sept. 11 terror attacks. The victims in Charleston were friends: Capt. William "Billy" Hutchinson, 48; Capt. Mike Benke, 49; Capt. Louis Mulkey, 34; Mark Kelsey, 40; Bradford "Brad" Baity, 37; Michael French, 27; James "Earl" Drayton, 56; Brandon Thompson, 27; and Melvin Champaign, 46. City officials declared Friday a day of mourning for the nine men in their seaside tourist town, where the first funeral was planned later in the day. At the entrance to the North Charleston Coliseum before the memorial service, a retired Marine from nearby Mount Pleasant stood with an American flag. "I joined the Marine Corps when a couple of these kids were just being born. If that don't make you cry, you're not a human being," said Robert Turner, 47. "These guys do the same thing that we did in the Marine Corps. It's all duty. It's all honor. It's all for your country or for somebody else. You don't join the service to get rich. You don't become a firefighter to get rich." Black bunting hung over the lighted signs around the 9,000-seat arena Friday, and officials planned to broadcast the service to screens outside and inside an adjacent performing arts center and nearby convention center. Nearby, more than 250 firefighters lined up along a sidewalk to form a human passageway through which the families of the victims would walk.
"When we lose one, it affects us all," said Lt. James Diego, who drove from the Newport News, Va., Fire Department with several colleagues for the memorial. "Most of us have suffered some sort of loss in our careers, and it's a way to pay back the people who supported us when we had a line of duty death." Among those expected for the service were former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee - both presidential candidates - as well as Barbara Richardson, wife of Democratic New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who is also running. South Carolina Firefighters Association President Joe Palmer said dignitaries would be seated at the back, however, well away from firefighters' families. "This event is about the firemen who were lost - honoring them and their families. It is not a political event and shouldn't be politicized in any way," said Jeff Zack, a spokesman for the International Association of Firefighters. He said firefighters were coming from as far as Arizona and Alberta, Canada. The investigation into the warehouse fire was still under way Friday. Officials on Thursday released tapes of several 911 calls about the fire. While federal investigators have not confirmed where the blaze, some of the 10 recordings bolster the assertion several city fire officials have made that it likely started at the back of the store in a covered space between the showroom and a warehouse crammed with furniture. A store employee told The Associated Press that workers frequently smoked cigarettes in that area and were strongly cautioned to carefully throw them away. Federal investigators have not discussed possible causes for the fire, and have not revealed if they are considering whether a cigarette could have started the blaze. "We have made fantastic progress in this investigation, however, it still has to be a very systematic, deliberate investigation," said Earl Woodham, a spokesman for the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. In a gesture of solidarity, medics from the Framingham, Mass., Fire Department hung their department T-shirt at a makeshift memorial outside the charred store.
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