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Firefighters look for clues in a house where an early morning fire left five people dead on Sunday in Connecticut. Madonna Badger, who bought the large Victorian home last year, was able to get out of the house, along with an acquaintance. Image Credit: AP

Stamford, Connecticut: A fire tore through the home of an advertising executive in a tiny neighbourhood along the Connecticut shoreline on Sunday, killing her three children and both of her parents on Christmas morning.

Madonna Badger, who bought the large Victorian home last year, was able to get out of the house, along with an acquaintance.

Police Sergeant Paul Guzda said Badger's three daughters — a ten-year-old and seven-year-old twins — were killed. He said her parents, who were visiting for the holiday, also died. Police officers drove Badger's husband, Matthew Badger, from New York City to Stamford on Sunday morning.

Guzda said the male acquaintance was a contractor who was doing work on the home. Badger, an ad executive in the fashion industry, is the founder of Badger & Winters Group. A supervisor at Stamford Hospital said she was treated and discharged.

Neighbours awakened to the sound of screaming and rushed outside to help, but they could only watch in horror as flames devoured the grand home in the pre-dawn darkness and the shocked, injured survivors were led away from the house.

Terrible

"It is a terrible, terrible day," Mayor Michael Pavia told reporters at a news briefing at the scene of the fire. "There probably has not been a worse Christmas day in the city of Stamford."

The fire was reported shortly before 5am. Firefighters were able to rescue Badger and another adult from the house in Shippan Point, a neighbourhood that juts into Long Island Sound, Acting Fire Chief Antonio Conte said.

"We had our hands full from the moment we arrived on the scene," he said. Firefighters knew there were other people in the home but could not get to them because the flames were too large and the heat too intense, Conte said, his voice cracking with emotion.