Illegal fireworks display sparks Lunch Box blaze

City College police officers responded to reports of shots fired at the Ocean Campus Lunch Box restaurant on May 6 and discovered that the source of the noise was not a gun, but an unlicensed fireworks display on the roof which resulted in a small fire.

By Estela FuentesThe Guardsman

San Francisco firefighters douse a small blaze at the Ocean campus Lunch Box on May 6. ALEX EMSLIE / THE GUARDSMAN

City College police officers  responded to reports of shots fired at the Ocean Campus Lunch Box  restaurant on May 6 and discovered that the source of the noise was not a  gun, but an unlicensed fireworks display on the roof which resulted in a  small fire.

Firefighters quickly doused the flames, but police  evacuated the area and Cloud Circle was closed off when firefighters  found an pyrotechnic device on the roof of the Lunch Box. CCPD chief  Andre Barns said the incident is being investigated as arson by the city  police and fire departments as well as City College police.

“This  was not just a normal fireworks display. It was very large,” a City  College police officer who declined to state his name because he was not  authorized to speak said. “Now it’s looking like it was absolutely  something that was set up.”

City College officers called the San  Francisco fire and police departments when they realized there was a  fire.

The Bomb Squad was called in to determine whether or not  the device, which started the fire and may have been a triggering  mechanism for the fireworks, was still a danger. Two K-9 units were  brought in to search the perimeter around the restaurant for more  explosives, but found nothing.

“At first, I thought someone threw  a grenade up here,” Lunch Box employee Baline Wong said. The restaurant  reopened briefly before police shut it down and deemed it a crime  scene.

“There was hella fireworks. It was pretty dope though,”  City College student Brock Smith said. “All we heard was a loud bang and  we looked up and it was fireworks.”

Several officers on scene  said because of the size and complexity of the pyrotechnics, they had to  have been set up in advance.

“Why would someone spend this kind  of money on something like this?” CCPD officer Rachele Hakes said.

Footage  from security cameras contained no evidence, Hakes said. Police  officials did not release any specific description of the device arson  investigators took from the scene.

“This wasn’t kids,” Hakes  said. “This was professional fireworks.”

Lunch Box employees told  police that they have not had any altercations or arguments with  customers that would encourage retaliation.

Despite repeated  attempts, representatives from the San Francisco fire and police  departments refused to comment.