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NJ motel fire kills 4, leaves Sandy survivors homeless

First flood, now flames.

Hurricane Sandy victims found themselves homeless a second time when a fatal fire 🥃destroyed a Jersey Shore motel that was still housing the displaced sur💃vivors.

The fire gutted th🐼e motel that had been housing some still-homeless Sa🥀ndy victims.AP

Four bodies were pulled from the charred wreckage of the Mariner’s Cove Motor Inn in Point Pleasant Beach in the hours after the early-morning fire Friday. Among those who fled the flaꦚmes but have again lost their home and possessions were at least four motel guests displaced by the October 2010 superstorm.

“It was the sound of timbers burnin🦩g upstairs,” Sandy victim Joe Frystock, 57, said of the nightmarish “popping” sounds that woke him in his second-floor room at around 5:30 a.m.

“I looked out and saw that orange glow, and there was no mistaking what it was,” he said. “People were yelling, ‘Help me! Help me!’ There was lots of screaming♍.”

Frystock’s home in nearby Brick Township had been inundated with 6 feet of water, and he described the motor inn as the latest in a series of 👍temporary homes for himself and his son, Matthew, 24.

“A woman in the unit next to me — they pulled her from a bathtub, but I don’t know how anyone could have survived t🐟hose flames,” Frystock said. “The entire second floor was engulfed, from one end to another.”

The woman had taken refuge from the inferno by standing in her shower and blasting the water. A firefighter handed her out of a window to another firefighter, who carried her down a ladder t😼o safety.

She was being treated late Friday for severe burns, Ocean County offic𒁃ials said.

Mariner’s Cove manager Raj Patel had also li🀅ved with his family at the motel, and had rebuilt after Sandy flooded the first floor — including his family’s quarters.

Patel had a soft spo𝔍t in his heart for fellow Sandy victims, and had allowed some to live at the motel free of charge when their FEMA benefits expire🔜d, according to The Star-Ledger.

Linda DeDreux, who owns the nearby Broadway Bar & Grill,
said firefighters to🦩ld her one of the fatalities was a man in his 60s who was too afraid to jump out of his second-floor window.

Resid꧃ent Peter Kuch did jump, suf🐓fering only a sprained ankle, after waking to the smell of smoke and opening his door to find a lounge area engulfed in fire.

“Myꦜ window was only open an inch, and flames were already starting🌊 to come through it,” he said of his life-saving leap. “There was just no other way out.”