Two people are confirmed dead after an explosion rocked a chocolate factory in Pennsylvania, officials said Saturday morning after initially saying that five people were killed.
The Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency had said in a tweet that Berks County had reported five deaths following a blast Friday at R.M. Palmer Company in West Reading, around 63 miles northwest of Philadelphia.
But Mayor Samantha Kaag said that the number is inaccurate and that two were killed. Five others remain missing and one person was rescued overnight.
“Some misinformation flows a little bit quicker. Not sure how it got out. If you come to us for the update, lean on us that we can give you the proper counts,” Kaag told reporters at a news conference.
A spokeswoman for Reading Hospital said eight people were brought to the facility. One was transferred, two were in fair condition and the others were released, said the spokeswoman, Jessica Belzer, of Tower Health.
The cause of the blast was unclear. The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The explosion occurred at 4:57 p.m., NBC Philadelphia reported. Images posted on social media showed massive flames tearing through the building and a tower of smoke after the arrival of fire fighters.
Kaag said the factory was “pretty leveled.” The explosion was so powerful it pushed a nearby building forward by several feet, she said.
“There’s not too much to be able to kind of salvage from it,” she said.
Richard M. Palmer Sr. founded the company in 1948 selling a handful of chocolates, including bunnies. R.M. Palmer Company now employs 850 people and sells more than 500 seasonal products, according to the company’s website.