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Two children die in Marion, Ohio fire. Lieutenant says first crews were short handed in a department that has lost firefighters due to budget cuts.

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A fuzzy image from home video shows you some early moments of the fire on Friday. See the video in a report from WBNS-TV.

Interview with neighbor who attempted rescue

More from MarionStar.com

Some thoughts on this fire from Chief Billy Goldfeder at The Secret List

In a department shrinking by attrition, a lieutenant speaks up following the deaths of two children in a house fire at noon on Friday. Neighbors rescued a 19-month-old before firefighters arrived, but a 2-year-old and an 8-month old died. Here are excerpts from the article by Barbara Carmen at The Columbus Dispatch:

“We showed up with an extremely short crew,” said Lt. Wade Ralph of the Marion Fire Department. “We found that the family had no working cell phones, no home phone.”

Ralph said half the company’s firefighters were on squad runs when the call arrived just after noon. That left only a three-man crew to enter the cavernous building, a former hospital converted into rentals. Three other firefighters stayed outside to operate equipment and set up a command post.

The cause of the fire remains under investigation. Ralph said the apartment was engulfed when firefighters arrived.

See a series of pictures from the Marion Star’s Bill Sinden.

City firefighters quickly called for help, summoning eight off-duty firefighters from home and borrowing six firefighters under a mutual-aid pact with Marion Township.

The economy has taken a toll on the department, Ralph said.

The city generally isn’t replacing those who retire or quit, leaving 59 firefighters in a department that previously had 65. Although losing one firefighter from a fully staffed shift might appear insignificant, it can take vital equipment off the street because firetrucks are large and complicated and require a certain level of staffing.

Helicopter view from WBNS-TV. See more images from the chopper.

Marion Mayor Scott Schertzer said his city has had “almost no growth at all” in this year’s budget. The city is hiring cautiously in case money for the position evaporates, he said.

“Every time an employee leaves, we re-evaluate and assess the budget,” Schertzer said. “I’m concerned the economy is hurting our ability to provide services to citizens.

“We can talk all we want about the budget and job losses, but let’s put things in perspective: Two very young lives were lost, and that’s going to affect that family forever.”

UPDATE: Details, video and pictures from the fatal fire in Exeter Township, Pennsylvania where two boys died. House was a creamery from 1880s.

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Photo from The Mercury News.

ReadingEagle.com’s video and still pictures from the scene

WFMZ-TV’s report

“In my 35 years (of firefighting), this was one of the most tragic and one of the most quickly spreading fires. Within a matter of seconds it went from being smoke to being fully involved.”

That’s what Chief Robert F. Jordan of the Reiffton Fire Company told reporter Brandie Kessler of The Mercury News about Saturday morning’s fire in Exeter Township, Pennsylvania. Six people were in the house just before 10:00 AM. Two adults and two children escaped. Two boys, 20-months and 9-years-old, didn’t make it out.

The wood-framed home where the boys died had been a creamery from about 1880 until 1930.

Exeter Township Fire Department Chief Robert F. Jordan talked to Reading Eagle’s Jason Kahl. Here are excerpts from the article:

“The first arriving units experienced heavy fire coming from most of the structure,” Jordan said. “They made a valiant effort to enter the building and tried to reach the second floor where the children were.”

Jordan said firefighters had to leave the building because the fire was too intense.

“I’m very proud of their efforts,” Jordan said, adding that it was one of the worst fires in his 40 years of experience. “I haven’t seen many fires escalate that quickly.”

He said the type of construction – dating to the late 1800s – and the materials used account for the fire growing so rapidly.

About 150 volunteers from 18 companies across the county responded and battled the fire for more than an hour before it was under control. Because of the lack of fire hydrants in the area, firefighters had to shuttle water in tanker trucks.

Heroes of the burning hillside. Report from Southern California.

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Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

If you haven’t seen this yet, please take a look. NBC correspondent George Lewis on the story behind the injuries to three Ventura County firefighters in Santa Barbara on Wednesday evening. You can read more about it here.

House fire in Glen Ridge, New Jersey

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The best I can tell from searching around the Internet is that this was an unoccupied home that caught fire Wednesday around 10:30 AM. The location is the corner of Outlook Place and Essex Avenue in Glen Ridge, NJ. Firefighters from Montclair, Bloomfield and East Orange responded. Two firefighters suffered apparently minor injuries.

Fatal fire in Berks County, Pennsylvania. Two children were reported trapped in an Exeter Township fire.

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Photo by Ben Hasty at Reading Eagle. Click here for more pictures.

There is limited information about a house fire this morning in Berks County, Pennsylvania. ReadingEagle.com reports officials confirm there were fatalities at the 9:45 AM fire on Oley Turnpike Road in the village of Limekiln, Exeter Township, near the Oley Township border. It is reported to be a non-hydrant area and a tanker task force was called to the scene.

WFMZ-TV reports the two-alarm fire trapped two children in the home and that the coroner had been called to the scene. They also report three minor injuries to firefighters.

Two-alarm house fire in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania

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Here is the description from NewsWorking.org of a house fire Friday morning in Bethlehem, PA:

Before 09:00, Bethlehem transmitted the box for a house fire at 450 Carlton St. sending 3 engines and a ladder company. Engine 1 arrived to find a 2 1/2 story duplex well involved on the first floor and front porches of both units. Initial reports of people trapped. Command sent an engine to the rear and a primary search that came up negative.

After the initial knockdown, firefighters were taking a water break on the street of side ‘A’. Our cameraman noticed a smoke condition developing on the second floor of the initial fire building. Within minutes, the second floor flashed over and flames poured out of the windows. 3 firefighters quickly went back into service stretching a handline to the second floor and darkened down the fire.

One firefighter was injured and the box was held to the second alarm companies.

Three firefighters from West Virginia accused of setting fire to occupied building across from firehouse. Helped residents to safety.

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From Madison Fire Department website

Watch story from WSAZ-TV

Read brief press release from West Virginia State Fire Marshal’s office

The West Virginia State Fire Marshal’s Office arrested three volunteer firefighters from Boone County. They are charged with setting a fire at 2:00 Wednesday morning in an industrial and residential building across the street from the firehouse.

Excerpts from WSAZ-TV’s article:

According to the criminal complaint, the three told police they were bored at the firehouse so they started experimenting with brake fluid and chlorine. Later that night, police say the three suspects decided to set a building on fire.

When the fire started, the complaint states the suspects went back to the firehouse and called 911 to report the fire. Then, they went to help the people inside the building get out safely.

More from the AP:

Three volunteer firefighters face charges of setting fire to a building in Madison.

The state Fire Marshal’s Office says 19-year-old Dustin Vance of Foster, 19-year-old Gerald Waters III of Madison and 19-year-old Larry Nunnery III of Danville were arrested Friday. All three are charged with first-degree arson and conspiracy.

All three men are members of the Madison Volunteer Fire Department. Each remains free on $20,000 bond.

The Fire Marshal’s Office says the men are accused of setting fire to a two-story building on Wednesday.

DC loses another round in beard case. Is it over yet?

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On Wednesday, DC Attorney General Peter Nickles found out his office lost in its efforts to get a federal appeals court to revisit the decision to rule against the city in the case over beards worn by first responders in the DC Fire & EMS Department.

“Unfortunately the court denied the rehearing,” Nickles told The Blog of Legal Times. According to Nickles, “Our views as to the health and safety of firefighters and paramedics haven’t changed.”

Nickles expects to now fight the battle to prevent the city from having to pay damages to the plaintiffs.

The ACLU’s Arthur Spitzer, representing the group of firefighters and paramedics proclaiming religious grounds for keeping their facial hair, is hoping the city is not going to waste its time pursuing this case further.

Click here for more details from Legal Times.

Click here, here and here for previous coverage of this issue.

Former Omaha union president found not guilty in prostitution sting. Darrren Bates, a Council Bluffs councilman, is appealing his firing from FD.

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Read and watch story on jury’s verdict

Read and watch story on video of hotel room sting

From the AP:

A man who lost his job as an Omaha fire captain after being arrested in a prostition sting has been found not guilty.

Darren Bates was charged with soliciting a prostitute following the Feb. 3 incident at a Council Bluffs, Iowa, hotel. On Friday, a Pottawattamie County Associate District Court jury found him not guilty.

Bates, who is a Council Bluffs city councilman, was fired from the fire department in March. He’s appealing that decision.

Bates has also been removed from his position with the Omaha Fire Union.

Omaha.com’s Jason Kuiper has more on the effort by Bates to get his job back. Here are excerpts:

He is contesting the loss of his $82,467-a-year job as an Omaha fire captain. Bates is seeking arbitration against the City of Omaha, which fired him following the incident. He’d also given up his position as president of the firefighters union.

His acquittal does not automatically mean he is reinstated as a firefighter. Joe Gudenrath, chief of staff to Mayor Mike Fahey, said Bates’ actions after he left the Bluffs hotel room also factored into the city’s decision to fire him.

After he was cited, Bates did not show up for work or contact fire officials for 16 days, according to officials with the city and Fire Department, who said they repeatedly and unsuccessfully tried to contact Bates.

The firefighters’ union contract says any unauthorized absence of an employee from duty shall be deemed an absence without pay and may be grounds for disciplinary action.

“The firing wasn’t just for his actions that day,” Gudenrath said. “It also was for his actions during the entire internal affairs process.”

A look at the investigation into the gas leak and explosion in Forestville, Maryland.

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Battalion Chief Kenneth McSwain

Watch Scott Broom’s story from 9NEWS NOW (or here)

Click here for previous coverage of the incident from STATter911.com

Read more from The Washington Post

Listen to the first 911 call and audio of the mayday (the complete fireground audio is in our previous coverage link above)

Survivors of Thursday’s catastrophic gas explosion at a Forestville strip mall say they saw gas bubbling through cracks in wet pavement before the explosion.

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“We had witnesses tell our investigators that they had been smelling gas for days,” said Battalion Chief Kenneth McSwain, who was in command of the incident when the explosion happened.

McSwain confirmed his firefighters also saw gas bubbling through wet pavement behind the strip of six businesses that were destroyed.

Firefighters also reported a small fire had mysteriously ignited at the rear of the businesses just before the explosion.

The source of ignition remains a mystery. McSwain said rescuers had cut power to the building and PEPCO workers were not on the scene.

Even so, in a statement, a Washington Gas spokesman said the utility is investigating the possibility a “third party” may have played a role in causing the disaster. The spokesman would not speculate on who that “third party” might be.

The story above written by Scott Broom

Quick takes

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Explosion in Forestville, MD: The image above shows the positions of three of the firefighters as debris begins flying and a fireball tears through stores at the Penn Mar Shopping Center. A fourth firefighter had just walked through the door into the building. Only two of eight injured firefighters remain hospitalized from Thursday’s explosion and they are in good condition. We now have a cleaner copy of the explosion video, fireground audio, a series of still images showing the firefighters’ positions, a list of injured firefighters and a lot of new details. Click here for our coverage.

You have to see the pictures: Salt Lake City has its first female battalion chief. The 7-year-old son of Rosemary Ellis pinned the badge on mom. But it is what dad, a captain with another fire department, did that will make you smile. Click here to see the pictures and read the story.

Huh?: We have heard the stories about firefighters falling to discover dead bodies in burned out cars and homes, but this is a new one. A man in Fort Wayne, Indiana claims he woke up in a car lot, in the back seat of his car after it had been towed there following a vehicle fire. Yes, he is claiming the firefighters failed to find a live body in the car. Is anyone buying this? I am not making it up. Check it out for yourself.

Well, that’s one way to rob a bank: Police say an assistant bank manager set fire to money in the vault to cover his tracks. He got caught and it probably didn’t help that he locked his keys inside the bank. Click here to read the story and here to watch it.

Reno 911: The Reno Fire Department is planning a trial of operating two-person staffing on a rotating basis at four fire stations. The idea is to cut overtime. Read the details.

Rotating closures for San Francisco?: That’s the proposal on the table to save money. Read more.

Fired assistant chief gets support: In Albany, Georgia an assistant chief was fired when he sent firefighters to clean out his aunt and uncle’s basement after a flood. Now supporters are trying to help him get his job back. Click here.

Demand that a captain be fired: You may recall the story of a Houston fire captain discovered with a noose in his locker. Some community groups want the captain gone. Read the details and watch the story.

Andy Fredericks Training Days: The registration deadline is here for the event honoring the FDNY and former Alexandria, VA firefighter. Click here for the details.

UPDATED: Video, audio & new details from explosion at Forestville, MD strip mall that injured 8 firefighters. The latest from Prince George's County.

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Cutting response time: Long Island fire department cites overnight program.

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Newsday photo by Ed Betz

Deer Park Fire Department website

In 2004 the average response time for the New York’s Deer Park Fire Department was 8 minutes, 35 seconds. It is now under five minutes. The dramatic drop is easily explained. Seventeen-months-ago the department instituted an overnight program which requires all but their long-time members to sleep one night a week at the firehouse. Now the fire company in Suffolk County, Long Island has a full crew sleeping at the firehouse 95 percent of the time.

Here are excerpts from a Newsday article by Stacey Altherr:

Officials believe the overnight program is the first of its kind on the Island.

Robert Leonard of the state Firemen’s Association said the organization “supports any and all creative approaches, such as this program in Deer Park, that allows our volunteer firefighters to effectively and efficiently serve their community.”

During their overnight shifts, which run from 7 p.m. to 5 a.m., the crew also trains in firefighting techniques, (First Assistant Chief Richard) Incandela said. A medical emergency crew also is on site during the night.

The crew first slept in recliners, but recently, offices were converted to men’s and women’s bunks. Deer Park Fire chairman Anthony Macaluso said the crew often eats together.

Long Island depends on its thousands of volunteers to respond to fire calls. Fire officials have complained about difficulty rousing volunteers, who then have to drive to the firehouse, often in the middle of the night. A 2005 Newsday analysis found 80 percent of similar Suffolk departments failed the national response-time standard of getting a crew to the scene in 9 minutes 90 percent of the time.

Quick takes

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View more news videos at: http://www.nbclosangeles.com/video.

Santa Barbara burning: Three firefighters are reported to be in a burn unit, injured while fighting the Jesusita fire. Click here for all our links to this Southern California fire.

Interview brings out the critics: Both Jerry Engle and Dave Statter are taking a few hits in the comments section following the airing and posting on Tuesday of the interview with the former PGFD firefighter. Engle claims he saw three firefighters lighting a fire in the town of Riverdale Park, but didn’t tell investigators until more than a year later. Click here and scroll down to see what readers are saying.

Testimony of fire official blocked: In a move that was somewhat expected, DC Attorney General Peter Nickles isn’t going to allow a deputy fire chief and another city official testify before a City Council hearing looking at the aborted pumper and ambulance to a Dominican Republic resort town. Bill Myers has the story in the Examiner.

Four-alarm fire at historic Vegas hotel-casino: The first integrated casino in Las Vegas was destroyed by fire Wednesday. The Moulin Rouge was in the process of being restored following a 2003 fire. Click here for video, images and details about its history.

More on the Australian fire captain questioned about deadly fire: We first told you about CFA Capt. Ron Philpott yesterday. He has been questioned about the Marysville bushfire in February that took 38 lives. The veteran volunteer firefighter proclaims he is innocent. Click here to view an interview with Capt. Philpott.

I guess it takes all kinds: In Delaware a man who was turned down by three fire companies was arrested for impersonating a firefighter. Apparently he was inspecting a fire alarm system when he was caught. Read more.

Geezer’s other favorite topic: This is another perfect Firegeezer story. It is about beer and it is about fire. A large building that had been part of a German brewery caught fire during demolition. Bill has lots of pictures and videos. Click here.

More pictures from Burtonsville 2nd-alarm: Jim Codespote has an extensive series of pictures on the Laurel VFD website from Saturday’s tw0-alarm fire in Montgomery County, MD. The pictures begin as an injured firefighter is brought from the building.

Three firefighters at burn center fighting Santa Barbara blaze. Links, video and details from Southern California.

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One of many videos shot by residents. Click here for more.

Santa Barbara Independent

KEYT-TV

KSBY-TV

KCOY-TV

California Fire News

California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection

WildlandFire.com

KEYT-TV reports that three firefighters from Ventura County are in the Grossman Burn Center in Sherman Oaks suffering first, second and third degree burns while operating at the Jesusita fire.

From the AP:

Fierce winds blew a wildfire into Southern California homes Wednesday, forcing thousands of people to flee as columns of smoke rose from a scenic coastal enclave.

TV news helicopters showed homes ablaze in Santa Barbara, but the number could not immediately be determined because of thick smoke columns that scattered embers over the city and streamed out over the Pacific Ocean.

Huge mansions and humble homes alike were reduced to rubble, leaving palm trees swaying over gutted ruins.

The fire had burned 200 acres, or about one-third of a square mile, by midday when winds were calm, then was whipped by up to 50 mph gusts. By sunset, it was 500 acres — about three-fourths of a square mile — and winds were down to 25 mph, said Santa Barbara County fire Capt. David Sadecki.

Authorities could not estimate the number of lost structures, but darkness revealed individual fires dotting hillsides.

More than 8,000 people were evacuated, according to a proclamation Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger issued in declaring a state of emergency for Santa Barbara County. He asked federal authorities to issue an assistance grant to ensure financial resources are available for firefighting.

Sadecki said two firefighters were overrun by flames and were hospitalized, but he had no other details.

Mayor Marty Blum said other firefighters remained perilously close to the flames.

“We have got a couple firefighters in a real tentative situation up there surrounded by some flames, so we are hoping to get them out of there,” Blum told KABC-TV.

One firefighter suffered a head injury earlier in the day.

More than 800 firefighters were on the lines, and 20 more strike teams totaling about 1,300 firefighters were requested.

“The firefighters are picking houses and seeing if they can make a stand,” Sadecki said. .

Four-alarm fire at historic hotel-casino in Las Vegas

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Volunteer firefighter under cloud of suspicion after deadly fire speaks out. Australia's Ron Philpott says "I am not an arsonist".

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We told you about this story in our Quick takes. Ron Philpott, a veteran Country Fire Authority (CFA) volunteer captain, has been questioned about the fire he reported in February at the mill where he used to work. That Black Saturday fire in Marysville killed 38-people. Above is a TV interview with Captain Philpott.

Firefighter impersonator just wanted to check out fire alarm system. Man had been turned down by 3 Delaware fire companies.

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This unusual story caught the eye of one of our regular readers. The article is by Terri Sanginiti at delawareonline.com:

A 19-year-old Townsend man was arrested Monday for posing as a fire inspector over the weekend to inspect the fire alarm system at the Smyrna Opera House, state fire officials said.

Shawn P. Evans, of the 300 block of Gumbush Road, was charged with criminal impersonation and criminal trespassing, Chief Deputy State Fire Marshal B. Scott Bullock said.

The incident occurred between noon and 1 p.m. Saturday when Evans walked in unnoticed at the Smyrna Opera House, at 7 W. South St.

Evans, who was wearing a blue jacket emblazoned with the Townsend Fire Company logo and holding a fire company pager, was stopped in the lobby after he got off the elevator from another floor, according to court records.

When confronted by an opera house employee, Evans said he was “checking that automatic fire alarm.”

Evans did not check in with the office as instructed on a sign telling “visitors to report to the office,” so no one knew he was in the building, officials said.

When the employee asked who he worked for, Evans said he was with Townsend Fire Company, court records said.

The employee notified the state Fire Marshal’s Office.

Fire officials determined that Evans is not affiliated with any local fire companies.

Townsend Fire Company President David Hall said the company’s name is not trademarked so anyone can go to a store and pay for a jacket emblazoned with it.

“I can’t control who prints anything with our fire company’s name on it,” Hall said. “This kid is not affiliated with us, nor has he ever been.”

Hall said Evans has tried unsuccessfully to join the company, as well as those in Clayton and Smyrna.

“This is the first time that he has represented himself as a member of our department,” he said. “He’s got the coat, but he’s not a member.”

Bullock said Evans had been ordered by the court to have no contact with the Smyrna Opera House and the Townsend, Clayton and Smyrna fire companies.

Evans was released on $750 unsecured bail.

Quick takes

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Three-alarm fire in Everett, Washington: The fire gutted a large building that is part of the Sno-Isle Tech Skills Center. One firefighter was injured after falling during the Tuesday afternoon fire. Click here for more details and pictures.

The man in the middle of the PGFD firefighter arson probe tells his story to STATter911.com: We have updated the article about our interview Tuesday with Jerry Engle, author and former volunteer firefighter in Prince George’s County. Engle claims he watched as three firefighters from Riverdale set a vacant house on fire in March of 2008. We have since found a description of the fire on Riverdale VFD’s website that matches some of Engle’s account. Both the home where Engle is living and the Riverdale firehouse were raided on Monday as investigators gather evidence connected to the targets of the investigation. Jerry Engle says he didn’t set any fires and wants to take a polygraph. So far, no arrests have been announced. Click here for a detailed account including videos, pictures and the complete interview with Engle, who proclaimed himself the top firefighter in the county.

Another firefighter arson probe: This one is in Australia and it has much more serious implications. A captain who reported the sawmill fire that sparked the bushfire that killed 38 people in February proclaims his innocence. While he hasn’t been charged with anything, the captain believes he has been unfairly targeted. Read more.

House fire where firefighter’s body was found is ruled arson: In Oklahoma, Osage Fire Department volunteer Michael Cobb’s body was found inside a burning home last Tuesday. Cobb was last seen an hour before the blaze at a fire company meeting. While they are providing few details, investigators say the fire was deliberately set. Read the article.

More tragedy for Houston: A Houston Fire Department cadet died Tuesday after collapsing during PT a week earlier. Click here for more and at Firefighter Close Calls.

Michigan chief gets a year’s salary: That is now the parting gift for former Brighton Area Fire Chief Martin Deloach. We had previously reported Deloach’s sudden firing in March. Read the details.

Wreck during driver’s training: Firegeezer has details of a collision between a fire truck and a utility pole on Sunday in Kane County, Illinois that left two firefighters injured.

Salvation Army opts out of Rhode Island canteen operation: The Special Signal Fire Association has responded for decades to fires and other emergencies in support of public safety personnel. The Salvation Army has provided the trucks and an old firehouse used as a headquarters. Budget cuts and a change in philosophy are changing this arrangement. The Salvation Army state coordinator told projo.com, “We are trying very hard to make sure our Christian message gets out, and the Special Signal Association is not particularly a Christian organization.” Read more.

Man at center of PGFD firefighter arson probe tells his story. Jerry Engle says he blew the whistle on Riverdale volunteers. Denies he was involved.

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Watch 9NEWS NOW 5:00 PM story

Part 1 of complete interview with Jerry Engle

Part 2 of complete interview with Jerry Engle

See video of Jerry Engle’s car

(If any of the video links do not work with your browser, go directly to our video page to select the clip)

Jerry Engle claims he watched as three firefighters set a vacant house on fire in early 2008, in Riverdale Park, Maryland. According to Engle, he left an anonymous letter for the chief and president of the Riverdale Volunteer Fire Department alerting them to this serious problem. Engle says no actions were taken.

Jerry Engle, a long time volunteer firefighter at Riverdale and three other fire companies in Prince George’s County, told STATter911.com on Tuesday that he didn’t bring up the incident again until a little more than a month ago. That’s when Engle was accused of stealing equipment from the Riverdale firehouse and began providing information to fire investigators about the year-old arson.

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Video of March 17, 2008 fire at 5413 Riverdale Road. The Bladensburg VFD website has pictures and more details of this fire, reported at 6:21 AM. There are also more pictures here. It appears the house also burned in the early morning hours of March 15, 2008 and possibly in the evening hours of March 16, 2007.

The house that burned used to sit on what is now a vacant lot at 5413 Riverdale Road. Engle believes the incident he witnessed occurred in March of 2008. There is a YouTube video from March 17, 2008 of a fire occurring at that house. According to area fire department websites the same house also burned two days earlier in the early morning hours of March 15, 2008 and possibly in the evening hours of March 16, 2007.

Engle claims the episode began when he drove the fire engine to check out a report of smoke in the area during the overnight hours. According to Engle, he waited inside the cab of the engine as the three other firefighters on board walked toward the home carrying road flares. Thinking that was odd, Engle says he followed the firefighters and saw them using the flares to ignite debris inside the house.

According to Engle, he drove the fire engine with the crew back to the Riverdale firehouse a few blocks away. Once there, Engle says two firefighters then left the fire station with a gasoline can. A short time later the call was dispatched for a house fire at 5413 Riverdale Road.

The Riverdale VFD website has details and pictures of what is apparently the March 17, 2008 fire that is similar to Engle’s account:

At about 0545 hours, a citizen heading to work called the station stating he smelled what seem to be mulch burning in the area of Tanglewood Drive and Riverdale Road. He added that he did not see any smoke or fire in the area. The station notified Public Safety Communications (PSC) and responded to the location with E807 staffed with 8 volunteers. After arriving in the area and finding nothing the crew returned to the station.

Picture from Riverdale VFD website.

As they were heading back to bed, PSC alerted the station for a reported house on fire at Kenilworth Avenue and Riverdale Road at 0621 hours. E807 went on scene at 5413 Riverdale Road with fire and heavy smoke coming from the 3 story vacant structure.

(Note: The Riverdale VFD website actually lists this fire as March 16, 2008, but two other sites show it as March 17.)

Google Maps Street View of house that Jerry Engle says was torched by firefighters. Click image to tour the area.

Jerry Engle contacted STATter911.com immediately after Monday’s raid at the Riverdale Volunteer Fire Department. Fire investigators served a search warrant looking for evidence of a possible arson ring involving firefighters. Engle says a warrant was also served at the Bowie area home where he is currently living.

Jerry Engle denies being involved in the Riverdale Road fire or setting any other fires, but admits investigators have questioned him extensively about the arsons. Engle wants the investigators to administer a polygraph examination to prove he is innocent.

Engle believes the investigators were already looking at the possibility firefighters were involved in a string of arsons when he provided the information about the Riverdale fire.

Sources indicate a handful of volunteer firefighters remain operationally suspended as the investigation continues. This includes three firefighters at Riverdale. One of the suspended Riverdale volunteers is also a career firefighter in Montgomery County.

Contacted about Engle’s allegations, Riverdale Volunteer Fire Department Chief Charles Ryan III, says the department stands by its previous statements that they are cooperating 100 percent with fire investigators.

Prince George’s County Fire/EMS Department Chief Spokesman Mark Brady says the department can’t make any comments about the case because the search warrants served by investigators remain sealed.

In a previous statement issued by Brady, the department acknowledged investigators were looking at suspicious fires in six vacant homes, but made no mention of the possibility that firefighters were the suspects. The fire identified by Engle is not on that list.

Engle has long been a controversial figure in the Prince George’s County Fire/EMS Department. He wrote a book called Probie Days about Engle’s many years with the Kentland Volunteer Fire Department, one of the busiest volunteer fire companies in the world.

Last year, videos surfaced of Engle’s time at Kentland. It showed firefighters apparently hazing a new firefighter and shooting off illegal fireworks inside the station. Engle was seen using his body as a launching pad for a bottle rocket.


Engle drives a red Volkswagen adorned with numerous pieces of small fire equipment, including nozzles and axes. Many firefighters who have seen the vehicle have questioned how Engle got the equipment. Engle says none of the items were stolen, but they are surplus equipment he was allowed to take from the various stations where he was a volunteer.

Engle admits his departures from the volunteer fire departments at Kentland, Riverdale and Bladensburg each involved controversy. Engle was suspended from the Riverdale Heights Volunteer Fire Department in March following the accusations that he stole items while his company was transferred to the Riverdale station. Engle says the nozzle and nozzle bale he took were his own that he had left behind after parting ways with Riverdale VFD last year.

Engle say he was told by a top official in the Prince George’s County Fire/EMS Department that he is now permanently barred from being a firefighter in the county.

More tragedy for Houston Fire Department. Cadet dies a week after collapsing during PT.

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Houston Fire Department cadet Conway M. Johnson died early this morning at Hermann Memorial Hospital. According to the Chronicle, the 26-year-old Johnson collapsed last Wednesday during an early morning jog as part of the department’s routine physical training.

KHOU-TV reports Conway Johnson was at the training academy when he took ill. Officials told the TV station, while it appeared he had been improving, Johnson’s condition took a turn for the worse on Monday.

The medical examiner is investigating the cause of death and an internal investigation is reported under way.

In less than five weeks the Houston Fire Department has also dealt with the deaths of two firefighters in a house fire and the collision of two fire trucks that resulted in the death of a bicyclist and injured nine firefighters.

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Neighbors take in house fire after storm: What may have been a lightning strike sparked this house fire in Columbus, Ohio on Friday.

Raid at Maryland firehouse as arson ring investigation continues: Fire investigators and other law officers showed up at the Riverdale VFD in Prince George’s County armed with a search warrant during the noon hour Monday. They spent more than five hours looking for evidence of a possible arson ring involving firefighters. We have the latest on the story we first told you about on April 20. Click here for our coverage.

Should a day care center be in the same building as a lab for a defense contractor?: That’s the question being asked in Alexandria, Virginia after a small explosion on Monday inside the lab of BAE Systems on Duke Street. When BAE arrived in Alexandria a decade ago it shared the building with similar type businesses. More recently a good chunk of the building is used by a church and a day care facility. Reviews of the set-up are underway by code enforcement officials and BAE. Watch the story, or click here to read and watch it.

The Terminator threatens to terminate firefighters and stations: From the San Francisco ChronicleGov. Arnold Schwarzenegger plans to seek the elimination of more than 1,700 state firefighting positions and closure of scores of fire stations if voters reject key ballot measures in the May 19 special election, according to documents obtained by The Chronicle on Monday.

Firefighter goes to court to face arsonist: We recently told you about the Buffalo teen who had previously received 100 hours of community service for setting a fire that almost killed a firefighter and was recently arrested for a violent assault at a high school. 17-year-old Curtis Byers was in court on these latest charges yesterday. Attending the hearing was Mark Reed, the Buffalo firefighter who lost his leg when a chimney collapsed at the house Byers set on fire two-years-ago. Reed was supported by his fellow firefighters. Click here to watch the story and here to read more.

Close call for engine crew: Firegeezer, with the help of PhillyFireNews.com, has the pictures and story of a near rollover along I-95 in Delaware County, PA. Click here for the story.

Debbie does Palm Beach and quite a few other places – the woman behind the voice: An interesting look at the woman who dispatches fire and rescue equipment all across the country and never has to leave her home in Wisconsin. Debbie Rohr is one of the voices used by Locution Systems, Inc. for the company’s automated public safety dispatch system. One place Rohr is heard is in Palm Beach County, Florida where she has been written about in the Palm Beach Post.

Weeks before opening, fire station builder say goodbye: In Plano, Texas Fire Station 12 was scheduled to open in July. That was before the builder announced this week it is out of business. Read the story.

Law restores ability to train junior firefighters: A look at why North Carolina needed legislation to be able to once again fully train junior firefighters. Click here for the story.

The debate over a ladder truck: They haven’t had one in Tiverton, MA since its donated 1951 model became impossible to repair in the early 1990s. A 24-foot ladder is the largest the department has at the moment. The mutual-aid ladders, including Fall River, are becoming more and more of an issue due to cutbacks. Now, a proposal to purchase the towns own rig is the hot topic on the agenda for a financial meeting scheduled for Saturday. Read more.

UPDATED: Search warrant served at Prince George's County firehouse. Sources say federal & local investigators are looking for evidence of arson ring.

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Read original story from April 20

Read follow-up story from April 21

Read May 4 and April 21 statements from Riverdale VFD officials

Watch Scott Broom’s 7:00 PM report (or here)

STATter911.com has learned that Prince George’s County fire investigators and ATF agents showed up at the Riverdale Volunteer Fire Department (PGFD Station 807) during the noon hour today. We are told by sources familiar with the investigation a sealed search warrant was served. 9NEWS NOW reporter Scott Broom, on the scene, reports the investigators searched the firehouse and were loading material into vehicles parked in the apparatus bays.

According to the sources, investigators were looking for evidence of a possible firefighter arson ring operating in the county. As STATter911.com was first to report on April 20, the Prince George’s County Fire/EMS Department received claims that volunteer firefighters had been setting fires in vacant homes. Officials, so far, have not announced any arrests in the case.

Since the story broke, PGFD’s only official statement acknowledges an investigation is underway into suspicious fires in six homes that have burned since January. The department has released no information indicating there are firefighters in the county suspected of arson.

At Riverdale VFD, Chief Charles Ryan III and President Stephen Lamphier issued a joint statement Monday evening that says in part:

The department continues to cooperate with the investigation into arson allegations that have been publicized recently. In doing so, investigators were unimpeded in their execution of a sealed search warrant on the premises of the Riverdale Fire Department.

As this continues to be a law-enforcement related personnel matter, The Riverdale Fire Department, Inc. cannot comment on any details. The department’s members and officers continue to cooperate 100% with the investigation to ensure an expeditious and accurate resolution to these allegations.

Sources confirm that a handful of volunteers remain operationally suspended from Riverdale VFD and at least one other station in the county. One of the Riverdale volunteers suspended is also a career firefighter in neighboring Montgomery County. Investigators from the Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service are part of the investigative team.

According to sources, some of the targeted firefighters are live-in members at Riverdale. The warrant allowed the investigators to go through the firehouse looking for possible evidence connected to those individuals and the series of fires.

Because it involves a sealed warrant, PGFD Chief Spokesman Mark Brady said Monday afternoon that he is not at liberty to talk about the activity.

The investigators completed their work shortly after 5:00 PM. According to sources, the volunteer crew at the station left the firehouse with Tower 807 and Ambulance 807 shortly after the investigators arrived and remained on-the-air available for calls until they left.

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You’ve got to know when to hold them and know when to fold them: These are people from my side of the fence who find the up close and personal view a little too up close and personal. This is video from a CBC crew on a fire last week in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Read more about the fire.

Chief stands by his men, but is it the right move?: We have a little debate going in our comments section about my look at Chief Ray Jones and his decision to give another chance to four members of the Sacramento Fire Department. The captain and three firefighters went on a days long drinking binge while on a wildland firefighting assignment. Whether he is right or wrong with this decision, I am intrigued by Chief Jones. This is the second time in eight-months he has hit my radar screen by taking public positions on controversial issues that other chiefs might view as political suicide. Click here to read the details and join the discussion.

Please don’t give us a new firehouse: The members of the Brandywine VFD in Prince George’s County list a number of reasons why they don’t want the county to build them a brand new fire station. One of the reasons is the loss of the social hall Brandywine members believes is the hub of their community and vital to the VFD’s fund raising activities. PGFD says it isn’t a done deal yet and they are listening to the concerns. Read the story from Megan McKeever at Gazette.net. Read Brandywine’s open letter to the community at its website.

When volunteering and the J-O-B collide: From Iowa, a volunteer firefighter thought he had an understanding with his employer. That turned out not to be the case. Read the details.

When the J-O-B and the other J-O-B collide: Actually the collision in Woonsocket, Rhode Island is once again between the mayor and the IAFF. Starting a week from today, Mayor/Public Safety Director Susan Menard or Fire Chief Gary Lataille will approve all moonlighting by firefighters. City officials claim, with recent layoffs, they need to make sure the remaining firefighters are up to the job and not too beat from working elsewhere. As you can imagine the union feels quite differently. Read the latest.

The fireground after one-fourth of the firefighters are axed: A reporter with The Herald News of Fall River, Massachusetts didn’t just do the story of massive layoffs and forget about it. Six-weeks after the cutbacks, Michael Holtzman takes a detailed look at its impact on the way the Fall River Fire Department operates. Click here for a series of articles and a video with the chief.

UPDATED – Now have early video from Newark, NJ 4th-alarm: A fire officials say was set following a spat between lovers gutted a 6-story apartment building. We have added video that shows firefighters still operating on the interior and working to remove the occupants. Besides the videos, we have before shots that give you close-up views of most of the building. Click here to check it out.

A look back to a remarkable recovery: Does the name Scott Miller mean anything to you? Think back 17-years-ago to the riots in Los Angeles after the Rodney King verdict. He was the firefighter struck in the neck by a bullet while navigating a ladder truck through the smoke filled streets. The firefighter was lucky to have survived and there was a good chance he would be paralyzed. The Los Angeles Times catches up with Captain Scott Miller and the work he does today in the Fire Prevention Bureau. Here’s the article.

Preview of Maryland report: Montgomery County Fire & Rescue Service Chief Richard Bowers gave his department a preview of an upcoming report into a floor collapse during a fire that injured three firefighters. The fire, on Twinbrook Parkway in Rockville, occurred one-year-ago yesterday. One-week-ago today the most seriously injured from that crew returned to full duty. Click here for the report preview and a lot of links to pictures and video from our previous coverage of the fire.

The man who ordered that Montgomery County report faces critics at six-month point in Charleston: A little perspective on some of the controversy in Charleston, SC about the pace of change, the retention of some of the former chief’s people and an outsider being brought in as operations chief. The Post and Courier talks to Chief Tom Carr and others about the state of the fire department. Read more.

A more recent apartment fire in Montgomery County: Pictures from a garden-apartment fire in Burtonsville on Saturday along with a detailed description of how the fire spread.

Request for material: A documentary is in the works based on the book Firefight: Inside the Battle to Save the Pentagon on 9/11. Greg Jacobs, co-founder of Siskel/Jacobs Productions is looking for video, pictures and other raw material that may be available. Click here to learn more.

The perfect Firegeezer story: This one has all of the elements that Bill is noted for in his excellent coverage of the pressing issues in fire and EMS today. It is international in scope. It involves EMS in the United Kingdom. It touches on the issue of how first responders present themselves to the public. And most importantly, it’s about sex. See for yourself.

Response to deadly bus crash dissected: Five people died and 31 were injured when a bus carrying French tourists crashed in Monterey County, California on Tuesday. The Herald takes a detailed look at how first responders handled the call. Check it out.

He almost gave his ex the finger, but the firefighters got it back for him: In California, firefighters had to make homework out of the rescue of a man who got his finger caught in his former gi
rlfriend’s car. A portion of the car ended up back at the firehouse when the job couldn’t be completed at the scene. Click here.

The wildland firefighting controversy: Redding.com takes a look at the debate in California between environmental groups, citizens organizations and the firefighting forces over the issue of when to fight them and when to let them burn. This is Part 3 of a five-part series called Fire, A Way Forward. Click here for the latest article and the videos.

House fire in NJ: Early video from a fire on Marcy Avenue in East Orange on Saturday.

Information please: For our PIO readers and others who communicate with the public, an interesting look at how Virginia and Maryland are taking different approaches in what they are telling the public about H1N1. Read the article.

Awards in Prince George’s County: It is amazing anyone involved still has a job after they invited me to emcee the annual valor awards last Thursday. The only saving grace must have been that I brought along the talented and lovely Lesli Foster to charm everyone. Click here to read more about the awardees and watch a video from the wonderful event.

Battling Chicago: As part of Police Week activities, the DC Generals police and fire football team are taking on the Chicago Enforcers on May 16 at Gallaudet University (where the huddle was invented in 1894). Proceeds go to local charities helping police and firefighters. The game is dedicated to the memory two fallen police officers with ties to local fire departments, Sgt. Richard Findley and TFC Mickey Lippy. Click here for the details.

Documentary producers looking for material from the Pentagon

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We have been asked by Greg Jacobs of Siskel/Jacobs Productions in Chicago to pass along this request for raw material:

The producers of the acclaimed History Channel documentary “102 Minutes That Changed America” are seeking amateur and professional video footage for a documentary based on the book Firefight: Inside the Battle to Save the Pentagon on 9/11. They are interested in raw sound and video from the time period starting immediately after the attack on the Pentagon and lasting through 9/21/01. In particular, they are looking for:

1. Any video, audio, or still photographs of the operations at the site itself (firefighting, search and rescue, evidence collection, etc.).

2. Any amateur video or audio from 9/11/01 in and around Washington, D.C. That includes footage of other buildings being evacuated, man-on-the-street conversations, home movies of people responding to the news, saved phone messages, etc.—anything that helps illustrate not just what happened, but how the day felt.

If you have or know of any such material, please contact greg@siskeljacobs.com.