Days after telling his surviving children that their five siblings died in a house fire, Troy Lewis put the blame squarely on his landlord for not providing sufficient heat.
"I wouldn't be standing here in front of you. I would be home with my babies," he said at a news conference Wednesday afternoon, adding that he bought a space heater and left the oven on to warm the north Minneapolis apartment.
Investigators have not determined the cause of the early morning fire but said it appears to have started where the space heater was running between the living room and dining room.
The blaze in the upper floors of the duplex was so heavy that it burned a 6-foot circle through the third floor, where several children were sleeping, and destroyed most of the stairs leading there.
Lewis said he repeatedly told his landlord, Mission Inn, about the lack of heat. Mission Inn owner Paul Bertelson responded that his company did not get calls about heat, nor did Lewis bring it up in a face-to-face meeting the Tuesday before the blaze.
"We received no calls for maintenance repairs," he said late Wednesday afternoon.
Lewis contradicted Bertelson, saying he constantly called Bertelson and the manager of the duplex.
Lewis said he sometimes turned the oven on to heat the apartment. During the news conference, he said that the oven had been on for a couple of hours when the fire started. Following the news conference, he said he turned the oven off at 9 p.m.