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California wildfire death toll revised to 85 — down from 88, due to DNA tests

Click to play video: 'Total number of deaths in California’s Camp Fire is 88, officials say'
Total number of deaths in California’s Camp Fire is 88, officials say
Nov. 26: Officials in California said Monday that the total number of deaths in the Camp wildfire in the state has reached 88 – Nov 26, 2018

The death toll in California’s deadliest wildfire was revised downward to 85 and the number of people believed missing dropped again to 11, down from a high of more than 1,200 about two weeks ago, officials said Monday.

The number of dead was revised from 88 after DNA tests on remains by the coroner’s office, Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea said late Monday in a televised press conference.

Coverage of California wildfires on Globalnews.ca:

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Of the remains of the dead found, 43 people have been positively identified, the sheriff’s department said in a release.

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No new human remains have been found since last week, Honea said, but the search for remains is expected to continue Tuesday, he said.

READ MORE: Mudslides caught on camera add to California’s wildfire misery

If residents find remains, they are asked to call the sheriff’s department.

The so-called Camp Fire, which started Nov. 8, has all but obliterated the mountain community of Paradise, home to more than 27,000 people about 175 miles north of San Francisco.

The fire was fully contained Nov. 25, but the cause is still being investigated. The electric utility PG&E Corp reported equipment problems near the origin of the fire around the time it began.

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