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Water Balloon and Gasoline Burn Boy in Queens

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In this file photo, teens enjoy a water balloon responsibly.
We've all gone through a childhood pyro phase—kicking around flaming tennis balls, lighting farts, hot footing—and most of us managed to miraculously walk away unscathed. But occasionally you hear about an incident that makes you feel lucky you didn't win that Juvie Darwin Award you so richly deserved. Yesterday afternoon a water balloon, a puddle of gasoline and a lit match almost burned a 10-year-old boy to death in the Rockaways.

Gavin Rogers and a couple buddies say they were just chilling in the back yard while Gavin's parents were at work. (They'd been left under the care of Gavin's 13-year-old brother, who was inside the house at the time.) They filled up a dirt bike with gas, and some of the gas ended up spilling onto the patio where they were fooling around with water balloons. And at some point Gavin took a flame to one of the water balloons as he stood in a puddle of gasoline.

When the balloon burst, a still-burning piece of rubber ignited the gasoline on the patio, sending flames shooting up Gavin's body that were so intense they melted the rubber on the soles of his sneakers. "He just started screaming, 'Help me! Help me! It burns! It burns!'" his friend Chris DeMarco tells the Daily News. "I just tried to save him. I tried to put out the flames. It was bad. It was scary." An ambulance rushed the boy the hospital, where he was treated for second- and third-degree burns over half his body, including to his legs and face. His father tells the News, "I believe he's going to be okay. They initially thought it was really bad, but now they think... it's not life-threatening at all."

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Comments [rss]

  • mcmax

    Nah, healthy obsession with culling fact from fiction in reporting. It seems a lot of 'reporters' have acquired degrees in 'spin doctoring', so snippets of insight into their character helps understanding. You do know that not everybody is as 'fair and balanced' as Fox News, don't you?

    lol & regards.

  • mcmax

    Never mind the story topic, I'm just happy to learn more about John Del Signore to wit:

    "We've all gone through a childhood pyro phase—kicking around flaming tennis balls, lighting farts, hot footing..."

    Ah, no John, we "all" haven't behaved that way, but thanks for the perspective that helps me understand your biases.

  • just saying

    Unhealthy obsession with JDS?

  • anotherview

    Stop, drop and roll.

    If your clothing catches on fire; stop, drop and roll.

  • ViniTheHat

    Did they fill the bike's tank with a watering can? These kids are full of shit.

  • henryhamilton

    I agree the story is not 100% truthful, but it's hard to get anything into a balloon, other than water from a faucet. You need pressure to expand the rubber, you can't really just pour something in.

  • longacre

    You could easily fit a balloon over the nozzle of a gasoline can and pour it in.

  • David

    Right ...

    Or maybe they filled up a water balloon with gasoline, lit it on fire, and threw it at the kid. Which one sounds more plausible?

  • jaycjay

    As shaky as their story is, it's more plausible that your scenario. Do you really think you could light a balloon full of gasoline on fire, and have time to throw it at someone before it burst?

    I'd recommend not trying to find out.

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