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16 Hoffman Estates firefighters stranded in Mexico after hurricane

Sixteen members of the Hoffman Estates Fire Department are stranded in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, trapped by Hurricane Odile, media reports say.

Those 16 firefighters make up nearly 20 percent of the Hoffman Estates force. On Wednesday night, their families were pleading for help to get them home, ABC 7 Chicago reported.

Georgia Demet-Mangiameli - the mother of two sons stranded there, the youngest a Hoffman Estates firefighter - told ABC 7 the reports of looting worry her.

"These are firemen that save lives for a living, and now they're turning to us to help them get out of harm's way," Demet-Mangiameli said.

The firefighters were in Cabo San Lucas to attend the wedding of Hoffman Estates fire Lt. Tom Mangiameli, ABC 7 said.

Meanwhile, the firefighters in Hoffman Estates are having to work overtime.

"We're fully staffed every day," Hoffman Estates Fire Chief Jeff Jorian told ABC 7. "We're going to check our manpower and make sure everyone's still got a lot of energy left and working hard, and we're still protecting our area."

On Wednesday night, U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin issued a statement saying he's been in contact with the State Department, ABC 7 said. Jorian said U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk and the governor have also been notified and are working on a plan.

Police stepped up patrolling overnight in the resort area of Los Cabos, where looters stripped many stores of goods and tens of thousands faced a fourth day without water or power early Thursday in the aftermath of Hurricane Odile.

Authorities told local radio that officers would stop and question anyone they found on the streets after nightfall Wednesday to make sure they had legitimate business at that hour. Officials stopped short of calling it a curfew.

The measure sought to allay security concerns after days of looting of everything from convenience stores to big-box retailers. Some residents worried that private homes and condos could be next.

"People are running down streets with shopping carts, and you can see the desperation," Madelynn Pase, a 23-year-old Canadian living in Los Cabos, said by phone. "The supermarkets are all empty, so they're going to go to the next best thing."

Pase said people had been walking around at night shining flashlights into residences including hers, and she worried it could be would-be robbers casing potential targets. She spent the previous two nights sleeping on the floor to make it seem like her place was abandoned, and therefore without any food inside.

After hammering the Baja California Peninsula and other parts of northern Mexico in recent days, the remnants of Odile took aim at the U.S. Southwest.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center said parts of Arizona and New Mexico could get 6 to 9 inches (15 to 23 centimeters) of rain and warned of possible flash flooding. The Tucson area was forecast to bear the brunt of the storm, but Phoenix also might be lashed with rain and heavy winds.

To the south, Hurricane Polo was off Mexico's Pacific coast and headed in the general direction of Los Cabos, although early predictions were for the center to remain offshore.

President Enrique Pena Nieto's office said the federal government was working closely with state authorities on relief efforts in the areas battered by Odile, including restoring water and electricity.

It said more than 239,000 people had their power knocked out by the storm but predicted 95 percent of electrical service would be restored in the coming days.

In Los Cabos, people helped themselves to food, water, soda and toilet paper at wrecked supermarkets Wednesday. Some also loaded trucks with things like appliances, mattresses and patio furniture.

Long lines formed at tortilla shops and at stores selling ice as people tried to feed themselves and keep what food they had from going bad in the sweltering heat.

Lines also snaked from the couple of gas stations still working. Customers were each limited to 150 pesos' ($11) worth of fuel, about 12 liters (3 gallons).

At the Best Western near Los Cabos airport, guests filled buckets with pool water to flush their toilets.

Authorities said they had flown 5,000 tourists out of the region by Wednesday afternoon. Officials estimated 30,000 travelers were stranded by the storm.

Government planes were also flying in water and other supplies.

The remnants of Odile were over Arizona on Wednesday night.

The hurricane center said Polo was moving toward a possible brush of Los Cabos by Sunday, though its core was projected to stay offshore.

The storm was 180 miles (290 kilometers) south of Manzanillo, Mexico with maximum sustained winds of 75 mph (120 kph). It was moving west-northwest at 10 mph (17 kph).

In the central Atlantic, Hurricane Edouard was forecast to remain far from land, although swells could cause dangerous surf along parts of the U.S. East Coast north of Florida.

• The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Hoffman Estates firefighters safely back in U.S.

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