Medical Oxygen, Smoking Materials May Have Caused Gabriel House Fire, Investigators Say

The deadly fire at the Fall River assisted living facility appears to have started in a resident’s room on the second floor

Roughly 70 people lived at the Gabriel House assisted living facility in Fall River before a fire broke out on Sunday, July 13, 2025.
Roughly 70 people lived at the Gabriel House assisted living facility in Fall River before a fire broke out on Sunday, July 13, 2025.
Lindsey Poole / RIPBS
Share
Roughly 70 people lived at the Gabriel House assisted living facility in Fall River before a fire broke out on Sunday, July 13, 2025.
Roughly 70 people lived at the Gabriel House assisted living facility in Fall River before a fire broke out on Sunday, July 13, 2025.
Lindsey Poole / RIPBS
Medical Oxygen, Smoking Materials May Have Caused Gabriel House Fire, Investigators Say
Copy

Investigators believe the deadly fire at the Gabriel House assisted living facility in Fall River started in a resident’s room from either a failed oxygen concentrator or smoking materials later found in the room.

“During this past week, investigators have retrieved and recovered more evidence, reviewed video footage, and spoken to witnesses,” Bristol County District Attorney Thomas Quinn III said at a press conference on Tuesday. “The conclusion remains the same: the fire was accidental.”

Quinn said the investigation remains ongoing.

Massachusetts State Fire Marshal Jon Davine told reporters that the fire started on the second floor, and appears to have been an accident.

“We have the home oxygen use, the smoking material and the oxygen concentrator — so we may not be able to define between the two,” Davine said. “We’re going to continue to investigate but I don’t have a timeframe about when that will happen.”

Ten people died in the fire and more than 30 were injured. The resident of the room where the fire appears to have started was among the victims.

Fall River Fire Department Chief Jeffrey Bacon praised the dozens of firefighters who responded to the scene.

“They did a job no one should ever be asked to do,” Bacon said. “And I know they would do it again.”

This is a developing story and will be updated.

This sweet potato casserole is classic comfort made wonderfully simple. With pantry staples and just a few minutes of prep, you’ll have a creamy, cinnamon-spiced dish that bakes up beautifully and fills the kitchen with the smell of maple and vanilla. A guaranteed crowd-pleaser.
Meet the quesadilla you didn’t know you needed: turkey, cheese, and bright cranberries folded into a warm tortilla and cooked until perfectly crisp. It’s a cozy, kid-friendly recipe that feels both comforting and unexpected.
Meet your new brunch hero: a sweet-and-savory plantain breakfast hash topped with fresh chimichurri. It’s easy to make, packed with bold flavor, and perfect for feeding a crowd or meal-prepping a few breakfasts ahead of time.
If you’re craving something cozy, flavorful, and easy to make, these sweet potato empanadas check every box. A cheesy yam dough wrapped around a spiced black-bean filling? Yes, please. They fry up beautifully in just a few minutes and disappear even faster.
Looking for a quick treat that feels gourmet but requires almost no effort? Enter: maple-candied pecans. They’re crunchy, cinnamon-kissed, and dangerously munchable — perfect for topping salads, gifting to friends, or eating by the handful while you “wait for them to cool.”
The US only recycles about a third of the glass it produces. How do we get those numbers up?