| Tuesday,
5 December 2006, 17:59 GMT
Blast fireworks company was fined
Both of the men were married and
each had two children
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The firm which owns a fireworks depot in which two firemen were killed in
an explosion had been fined for storing explosives without a licence.
Festival Fireworks was fined £1,000 under its previous name, Sussex
Fireworks and Displays, in 1999, the Heath and Safety Executive (HSE)
said.
The business, near Lewes, was last inspected on 11 October and currently
has a licence covering three buildings.
The scene of Sunday's fire has now been declared safe for investigators.
The site is still considered dangerous but Sussex Police said the wet
weather had helped to cool up to 20 gas cylinders which it was feared
could explode.
The cause of the fire at the site on Marley Farm in Shortgate, which
included a steel fabrication facility and the house of Festival Fireworks
owner Martin Winter, remains unknown.
The depot and nearby buildings were
gutted in the fire
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A Health and Safety Executive (HSE) spokeswoman said Sussex Fireworks pleaded
guilty to contravening the Explosives Act.
It admitted storing fireworks at Upper Lodge Farm, a building adjacent
to the explosion site, which was not covered by its licence.
Of the 12 people injured in Sunday's fire, only one remains in hospital,
a 39-year-old man from Uckfield who was a passer-by.
He suffered chest injuries and had facial surgery at the Royal Sussex
County Hospital in Brighton, but was in a stable condition on Tuesday.
One of the men who died was retired firefighter Brian Wembridge, 63,
who had been re-employed by East Sussex Fire and Rescue Service as a photographer
and cameraman.
'Shocked and saddened'
His pictures from fire scenes were regularly used by BBC South East
Today and the news website.
Editor Quentin Smith said: "Brian was a regular visitor to our newsroom
and his professionalism and friendliness was tremendously valued. We are
all shocked and saddened by his death and that of his colleague."
The other man who died was 49-year-old control room staff member Geoff
Wicker, who was also a retained firefighter.
Tributes to the dead firefighters
were laid at Crowborough
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Both men were married and both had two children.
At a press conference on Tuesday, East Sussex fire chief Des Pritchard
said the removal of the two bodies from the scene had been the primary
objective for the emergency services.
He said small fires were still burning and there were hazardous materials
on site including fireworks, gas cylinders and unexploded ordnance.
Ch Supt Nick Wilkinson said local residents who had to leave their homes
had found alternative accommodation.
Road closures were being reviewed but were still in place.
Police and senior firefighters have promised a thorough investigation
into the incident, which will also involve the HSEs.
East Sussex Fire and Rescue Service said it had been "overwhelmed by
the messages of kindness, support and empathy" it had received.
Books of condolence were opened at town halls and fire stations across
the county and a memorial fund started to the two men who lost their lives.
The BBC has also set up an online book of condolence.
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