Investigators concluded yesterday that the blaze at Universal
Studios' back lot was sparked by studio workers who were repairing a New York
street scape.
Meanwhile, the theme park reopened after the massive fire forced it to close
on Sunday.
The fire, which started Sunday morning, was ignited by repairing tools used
by workers who are veteran Universal employees, the Los Angeles Times said,
quoting sources close to the investigation.
It appeared the workers followed all protocols to prevent fire, the report
said.
Los Angeles County Fire Chief P. Michael Freeman said earlier that the
fast-moving fire was an accident.
"The investigation has ruled out any deliberate actions on the part of
anyone," Freeman said.
Studio spokesman Eliot Sekular said no filming was going on when the fire
broke out.
Nine firefighters and a sheriff's deputy suffered minor injuries in the
towering inferno which burned for more than 12 hours.
The flames destroyed huge chunks of movie history including sound stages and
much of the New York City streetscape used for exterior shots. It also burned
through the building that housed a mechanical King Kong that delighted tourists
on the popular backlot ride, and gutted a video warehouse.
At the large warehouse, videos of films going back to the 1920s were
destroyed, but everything inside the video vault was a copy of material stored
elsewhere, and "nothing precious was lost" said Ron Meyer, president of
Universal Studios.
Film negatives and other priceless materials were stored in underground
buildings several hundred yards from the fire, he said.