iPhone 5C Sets on Fire in School Girl’s Pocket
 The girl is treated for second-degree burns at a Biddeford hospital.
     
A middle school student in Kennebunk suffered second-degree burns 
Friday when her iPhone caught fire in her pants pocket just before a 
class, said her family and school officials. The eighth-grader sustained burns on one thigh and her back, and 
was taken to Southern Maine Health Care in Biddeford for treatment. Her
 mother, Judy Milligan, said, “I was a little bit in shock” when the 
school notified her about the fire. She said she preferred not to 
release her daughter’s name.
 
The 14-year-old girl had sat down 
just before her first-period French class Friday morning when she and 
her friends sitting nearby heard a pop from the Apple iPhone 5C she had 
been given by her mother two months earlier.
“Immediately, smoke 
starts billowing from around the student,” said Jeff Rodman, principal 
of the Middle School of the Kennebunks. “She knew right away something 
was wrong and, in a panic, knew her pants were on fire caused by the 
cellphone.”
The girl had to take off the pants, so girls in the 
class helped her into a corner of the room while others herded the boys 
from the room and summoned a teacher, who was standing just outside the 
door, Rodman said.
“It was sensitive. She knew she was kind of in a tough situation,” he said.
Teachers came to help, and someone in the main office called 911.
The
 girl had the presence of mind to “stop, drop and roll,” Rodman said, 
which reduced the flames and the injuries she suffered. “The phone fell 
out of her pocket ... and it was still smoldering. Her pants were still 
on fire,” he said.
Once the pants were off, one teacher wrapped 
the girl in a blanket while they waited for rescue workers and 
firefighters to arrive.
School officials declared a “hold in 
place,” so students could not leave their classrooms and emergency 
workers could get in and out of the building quickly, Rodman said.
The
 girl was taken to the hospital in Biddeford, where she was treated for 
what her mother said were second-degree burns. She was released after 
about 45 minutes.
She asked to return to class, her mother said, but school officials and health care workers encouraged her to go home.
“She’s very calm – just a calm person,” Milligan said.
A call to Apple headquarters was not returned by press time.
An investigator with the state Fire Marshal’s Office took pictures of the phone.
Andrew
 Rosenstein, owner of TechPort in Portland, which repairs Apple 
products, said customers have brought in batteries that were swollen and
 at risk of malfunction after extended use, but not from a phone that 
was almost new.
“There’s basically a lithium-ion type 
rechargeable battery built in (to an iPhone). The battery, as it charges
 and discharges, it’s really a chemical reaction that can generate 
heat,” Rosenstein said. “It’s very rare there can be an issue, but any 
battery is just a chemical composition that can be flammable in extreme 
circumstances.”
Rosenstein said his business uses a fireproof box
 to store batteries from devices that are being repaired, so fire cannot
 spread if they somehow ignite.
There have been sporadic reports of phone fires, though typically the phones that caught fire were being charged.
The
 most notable malfunctions of lithium ion batteries were aboard two 787 
Boeing Dreamliners, causing fires that led to the grounding of the 
aircraft.
Rosenstein couldn’t say what would have caused the 
battery in the eighth-grader’s phone to burn. He said there’s nothing 
else in the phone that could cause a fire. “These batteries installed in
 Apple products in particular are extremely safe. It’s an extremely rare
 incident,” he said.
Milligan said her daughter is an honor 
student and enjoys school, especially French class. She also is a 
competitive swimmer with the Biddeford Manta Rays, and had to miss 
Friday’s practice and Saturday’s meet in Belfast.
Milligan said she almost didn’t get the call from the school telling her that her daughter had been burned.
When
 she left the house Friday morning with her daughter and son, she 
realized she had left her cellphone in the house. She contemplated going
 without it for the day, but instead ran inside to grab it. In the 
middle of her hour-long drive to work, she got the call.
The iPhone, which was green and is now black, is useless. So are the pants, which Milligan agreed to replace.
“We went to Target and got a pair of yoga pants,” she said.
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