Woman arrested after fire kills at least 6 at Reno hotel

Kevin Clifford/Nevada AppealFirefighters work to contain a four-alarm fire at the Mizpah Hotel in downtown Reno Tuesday night.  At least six people have died and officials say more bodies may still be found.

Kevin Clifford/Nevada AppealFirefighters work to contain a four-alarm fire at the Mizpah Hotel in downtown Reno Tuesday night. At least six people have died and officials say more bodies may still be found.

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RENO " A woman was arrested earlier today on arson and murder charges after a fire swept through a three-story hotel in Reno's downtown casino district, killing six people and injuring dozens of others.

Police Chief Michael Poehlman said Valerie Moore, 47, set fire to a mattress in her room at the Mizpah Hotel. Officials were still trying to determine a motive.

The first victim was found about 90 minutes after the fire was reported, shortly after 10 p.m. Tuesday, Fire Chief Paul Wagner said. He said a search later turned up five more victims and more could still be in the rubble of the historic hotel.

Police estimated that when the fire started, 60 to 80 people were inside the 84-year-old brick building, a primarily residential hotel that had been recently renovated.

The blaze quickly engulfed the hotel's north wing, which covers most of a city block just east of Harrah's. None of the downtown high-rise hotel-casinos was threatened, Poehlman said.

A few residents jumped to safety from windows as the hotel burned. Others were rescued by firefighters with ladders and city workers who were in the area with a cherry picker. About 30 people were injured, some from jumping. The building's roof collapsed in the blaze.

Third-floor resident John Hicks said he saw one person jump from a window and land on a metal trash bin.

"I lost my clothes, I lost everything. It spread so fast I could have died," Hicks told the Reno Gazette-Journal. "The flames were getting into my room. I'm lucky to be alive."

The Mizpah was built in 1922 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.

"It was just gorgeous, and now it's all gone," said general manager Sharon Steele.

Fire Department spokesman Steve Frady said the hotel was equipped with smoke alarms but did not have sprinklers, which was allowed by city code because of the building's age.

Associated Press writer Scott Sonner contributed to this report.

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