Thick smoke and hot winds hampered firefighters struggling on Friday (October 27, 2006) to get the upper hand on a deadly wildfire in mountains near Palm Springs, California, while the reward for information on those who started it rose to $500,000. Four firefighters died and a fifth was on life support with burns over 90 percent of his body after being engulfed by the blaze on Thursday. By nightfall on Friday it had consumed 39,900 acres (16,147 hectares) and was 25 per cent contained, Riverside County Fire Dept. officials said. Fire officials are treating the blaze as arson and the deaths as murder but have not detailed their reasons. A reward rose from $100,000 to $500,000 on Friday after contributions from the local Morongo Indian tribe, county officials, California state coffers and a private donation. The Los Angeles Times quoted local residents as saying they had seen teenagers smoking marijuana near where the fire is thought to have started about 17 miles (27 km) northwest of Palm Springs. Weather forecasters expected at least another 24 hours of seasonal Santa Ana winds, gusting up to 45 mph (72 kph), throughout tinder dry southern California. The 15-mile (24 km) wall of flames was expected to take days to bring under full control despite extra crews bringing the number of firefighters up to more than 2,000. Doctors said the prognosis for the injured fireman, Pablo Cerda, 23, was poor. In addition to burns, Cerda had kidney failure and severe lung damage. Meanwhile more than 700 people who were forced to flee on Thursday waited anxiously with friends or at rescue centres for news of their homes. At least 10 buildings have been destroyed but the number was expected to rise. Some 1,000 people who spent a tense night trapped in the recreational vehicle park were allowed to leave on Friday. The blaze has yet to wreak the destruction of October 2003, when wildfires burned for days in mountains outside Los Angeles and near San Diego, killing 24 people, destroying more than 3,000 homes and burning some 740,000 acres (300,000 hectares).