Date

March 24, 2023 (2023-03-24)

4:57 p.m. (Eastern time zone)

7

10

Background[edit]

The R.M. Palmer Company was originally founded in 1948 by Richard M. Palmer, Sr., in the borough of Sinking Spring, Pennsylvania on a $25 thousand investment (around $245 thousand today). The company had four employees and four products: Baby Binks, Bunny Binks, Daddy Binks, and Hen & Egg. The Baby Binks were an instant success, leading to the 25 cent store chain making a $20,000 order for Easter, which propelled the company off the ground.[6]


In 1950, the company relocated to 237 North 11th Street in Reading, Pennsylvania. The company later built the factory complex located in West Reading, Pennsylvania, sometime during the 1950s, which has since became their main headquarters.[7][6] The R.M Palmer Company then proceeded to introduce Christmas and Valentine's Day in the 1960s and 1970s respectively, however, Easter products remained the company's predominant items, with it selling 30 to 40 of them annually. By 1985, the company employed 600 people and produced 200 items, which now included Halloween-themed candy. By the early 1990s, construction commenced on a 165,000 square feet (15,300 m2) distribution center in Exeter Township, Pennsylvania.[6]


The new millennium saw the distribution center be expanded to a size of ten football fields. In 2009, the company was named one of the top 100 Global Confectionary Companies by the American Registry. Today, it employs 850 workers at its headquarters and produced 500 unique products.[8][6]

Explosion[edit]

At 4:30 PM (EST), workers at R.M. Palmer building #2 detected the smell of natural gas.[9] They promptly reported to their supervisor, who informed them that a decision to evacuate would have to be made by a higher-up. The employees then returned to work.[10]


The explosion started just before 5:00 (EST) on March 24, 2023. It destroyed building #2, while damaging the main building. The explosion contained so much force that it physically moved one of the buildings back by four feet. After the explosion, damage from it resulted in the leak of gas that began to further fuel the ensuing fires.[8]


Reports made from Berks County, the county where West Reading is located, to Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency included a reference to a gas leak, possibly suggesting that the incident was instigated by a leak of gas. Local authorities, however, have indicated that the official cause is unknown.[11] Officials are still investigating the cause.[12] The National Transportation Safety Board has characterized it as a gas explosion,[10] and is examining a natural gas pipeline for fractures and any other sort of damage. A preliminary report was issued on May 2, 2023.[13] A final report could take up to two years to be released.[14]


Seven people, including 30-year-old Xiorky Nunez, 63-year-old Susan Halvonik, 62-year-old Michael Breedy, 44-year-old Diana Cedeno, and 55-year-old Judith Lopez-Moran, were killed.[14] Eight people were also reported to have been sent to Reading Hospital to be treated for their injuries, where one person had been transferred and two were in fair condition, while the others had been released.[15][16]


On March 25, one person had been pulled out of the rubble.[17] Later, the victim, Mexican-American Patricia Borges, stated that she and employees had alerted their supervisor half an hour prior to the eventual explosion, but their pleas fell on deaf ears. When the explosion occurred, she was shaken off a ladder and proceeded to attempt to flee, before the floor gave in and she splashed into a horizontal chocolate vat in the factory's basement. She screamed for help as the vat began to fill with water from firefighter's hoses. Crews eventually discovered her after search dogs indicated that there may have been a survivor.[18]

Lawsuit[edit]

On March 27, 2023, a neighbor named Betty Wright filed a lawsuit against R.M. Palmer for criminal negligence and recklessness and seeking for $50,000 due to physical and emotional suffering.[23] She claimed to have suffered cervical, lumbar, hip and leg injuries, as well as wage loss and loss of property.[24]