NEW YORK — The New York Fire Department reassigned three executives Monday and ordered intensive inspections of buildings under demolition after a deadly blaze in a condemned skyscraper at the World Trade Center site.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg also announced that a preliminary investigation indicated that careless smoking by construction workers started the Aug. 18 fire at the former Deutsche Bank building, which was being dismantled and cleaned of toxic debris floor by floor.

Two firefighters died of cardiac arrest while trying to battle that blaze.

After the fire, the department acknowledged that it didn't have a plan in place to fight fire at the tower and that it had not inspected the building's standpipe system, which connects fire hoses to its water supply, in over a year, even though it should have done so every 15 days. Inspectors found pieces of the standpipe disconnected in the tower's basement.

Commissioner Nicholas Scoppetta on Monday ordered deputy chiefs to inspect all buildings in their divisions that are under construction or demolition and to review all plans to fight fires at every building in their area.

Scoppetta also said that a deputy chief, a battalion chief and a captain at the firehouse in charge of inspections at the tower were being reassigned to headquarters.

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The reassigned deputy chief had received a memo more than two years earlier that included recommendations for how to fight a fire in the contaminated skyscraper, the New York Post reported Monday. The memo recommended that if a fire broke out, just one officer and two firefighters should go into the building to investigate and evaluate the situation.

Instead, more than 100 FDNY members rushed in to battle the flames. Firefighters Robert Beddia, 53, and Joseph Graffagnino, 33, both died of cardiac arrest.

A Fire Department spokesman confirmed Monday that the March 2005 memo from Battalion Chief William Siegel was authentic. The department wouldn't comment Monday on whether senior officials read the memo or accepted its recommendations.

The Deutsche Bank building had been vacant since it was heavily damaged during the collapse of the trade center towers on Sept. 11, 2001.

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