CAMPO, Calif. - Firefighters recovered the body of a man who ignored evacuation orders from a burned house Monday as they battled to contain Southern California wildfires that destroyed 20 homes and threatened several hundred more in rural areas, authorities said.
Crews worked against winds gusting up to 30 mph that were expected to continue late Monday in southeastern San Diego County, where a 4-square-mile fire churned slowly through hilly brushlands in a desert area near the U.S.-Mexico border.
The man's body was found just before 2:30 p.m. inside a home on Tierra del Sol Road near Campo, said Cal Fire spokesman Capt. Robbie Richard.
Officials did not identify the man, other than to say he was reported missing by neighbors who were concerned when they saw his only vehicle parked outside.
Neighbors told U-T San Diego the man was an 82-year-old with one leg.
Firefighters and sheriff's deputies had to wait several hours before it was safe enough to enter the home, San Diego County sheriff's spokeswoman Melissa Aquino said.
The 2,451-acre blaze was 40 percent surrounded Monday, with fire officials expecting further containment as night brought cooler conditions. About 80 homes were ordered evacuated near the Campo Indian Reservation.
The fire destroyed 20 homes, damaged 10 and burned 15 outbuildings since it erupted Sunday, said California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection Capt. Mike Mohler.