Video shows moment San Francisco home exploded

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Video shows moments San Francisco home exploded

Home surveillance video shows the instant a home in San Francisco blew up.

Home surveillance video shows the force of a blast that lifted a home off its foundation in San Francisco's Sunset District and leaving a woman dead.

The footage is from a neighboring home on the 1700 block of 22nd Avenue, where on last Thursday, a fatal fire and explosion occurred.

A 53-year-old man who lived at the home, Darron Price, was arrested on Friday and faces charges of drug manufacturing and involuntary manslaughter along with two counts of child endangerment tied to the explosion.

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California Dept. of Cannabis Control says suspect in fatal blast had no manufacturing license

San Francisco Police said Sunday that the Arson Task Force continued working over the weekend to process the scene of a fatal blast and fire that investigators say was an illegal drug manufacturing site in the city's residential Sunset District.

Investigators believe the home was the site of an illegal drug manufacturing lab.

Price's wife, who neighbors said was disabled, did not make it out of the burning home. Neighbors said the couple have two children who were not home during the blast.

Police said another woman, possibly a caretaker, was hospitalized with burn injuries.

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Suspect arrested in San Francisco Sunset home explosion; facing manslaughter, drug manufacturing charges

San Francisco Police Department announced an arrest Friday night in the deadly Sunset District home explosion and fire that happened a day earlier. A 53-year-old San Francisco resident is facing charges for manslaughter, child endangerment, and drug manufacturing.

An arson task force removed large cylindrical tanks from the house after the blast, resembling tanks used to refine cannabis products.

The California Department of Cannabis Control which monitors cannabis manufacturing, said the suspect didn't have a license to manufacture cannabis the home.

"There are no licensed cannabis operations, including manufacturing, at this address or in this neighborhood. Due to their typical disregard for safety regulations, illegal cannabis manufacturing can be extremely dangerous... The DCC encourages people to report unlicensed cannabis operations on our website," said David Hafner, a spokesman for the department.