Skip to content


Watch live: Funeral service for Reisterstown (MD) VFC Firefighter Gene Kirchner.

3 comments

Live video from your Android device on Ustream

Above is live streaming of the funeral service for Reisterstown VFC Firefighter Gene Kirchner scheduled to start today at 1:00 PM EDT at Har Sinai Congregation in Owings Mills, MD. 

Firefigher Kirchner died Thursday from injuries received in a Reisterstown (Baltimore County) house fire on April 24.

Live streaming courtesy of Focal Point Productions.

UPDATED: Baltimore County, MD announces death of Reisterstown VFC Firefighter Gene Kirchner, injured in house fire last week. Funeral arrangements announced.

9 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”) 

Previous coverage here, here & here

Reisterstown VFC Facebook page

Reisterstown VFC:

It is with deep sorrow and regret that the Reisterstown Volunteer Fire Company announces the line of duty passing of Firefighter Gene Kirchner.  Gene succumbed to his injures after an 8 day fight.  He sustained critical injuries while he was performing a search on a dwelling fire April 24, 2013.    Gene is a 9 year member of our company and was a junior fire fighter for 2 years. A full fire department funeral will be scheduled.

Date of Funeral:  Sunday, May 5, 2013 Time of Funeral:  1 pm

Funeral Location: Har Sinai Congregation 2905 Walnut Avenue, Owings Mills, MD, 21117

Cemetery:

Dulaney Valley Memorial Gardens, Timonium, MD Shiva:

302 Bond Avenue

Reisterstown, MD 21136

Donations:

Contributions in his memory may be made to:

Reisterstown Volunteer Fire Company

108 Main Street

Reisterstown, MD 21136

Alison Kenezevich, The Baltimore Sun:

A volunteer firefighter who joined the Reisterstown Volunteer Fire Company as a teenager more than a decade ago died Thursday of injuries sustained in a fire last week that also killed another man.

Gene Kirchner, 25, died at Maryland Shock Trauma Center, officials said.

“Everybody is extremely shocked by this,” said Craig Hewitt, assistant chief of the fire company. “They’re missing Gene right now. He was a very key part of our fire company, and he will be greatly missed.”

Kirchner was one of the first firefighters to respond to the house fire on Hanover Road early on the morning of April 24.

He tried to save a man trapped inside, officials said. Kirchner was found unconscious on the second floor when a county response team arrived, officials said.

 

WJZ-TV:

Kirchner was critically injured in an April 24 house fire at 19 Hanover Road, a few blocks up the street from the Reisterstown Volunteer Fire Company.

Chief Craig Hewitt is among many saddened at the Reisterstown Volunteer Fire Company, where Kirchner and his twin brother William had volunteered for more than nine years.

“We have felt like we have kind of raised Gene and his brother from young men into adults. We’ve watched them grow as firefighters,” Hewitt said.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Command & control: Retired Baltimore Co. division chief goes public over command staffing after last week’s critical injury.

19 comments

 Reisterstown VFC Firefighter Gene Kirchner (l) and Lutherville VFC Firefighter Mark Falkenhan.

Jonathan Hart is a retired division chief from the Baltimore County Fire Department in Maryland. The column below, reprinted with his permission, was published today by The Baltimore Sun. It addresses staffing issues for command officers in Baltimore County that Hart connects to the recent critical injury to Reisterstown VFC Firefighter Gene Kirchner and the January, 2011 death of Lutherville VFC Firefighter Mark Falkenhan (increasing command officer staffing was a NIOSH recommendation). Here’s the column:

Over two years have passed since firefighter Mark Falkenhan was killed at an apartment fire on Dowling Circle in Towson. His death resulted, in part, from a collapse of the Incident Command System (ICS), when first-arriving units were faced with heavy fire and multiple rescues. ICS is a procedural policy for ensuring that command and control mechanisms are continually utilized during mitigation efforts at every incident. “Command” is assumed by the officer of the first-arriving unit and passed to the responding chief officer upon his or her arrival.

The National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) conducts investigations of fires that result in firefighter deaths. Among the recommendations made by the NIOSH investigation of the Dowling Circle fire was the following: “Increase command officer staffing to ensure fire fighter safety during emergency operations.”

Despite the clear findings of the NIOSH, very few operational changes have been implemented by the Baltimore County Fire Department to prevent similar incidents from occurring in the future, and nothing has been done to improve command staffing.

In fact, Baltimore County has fewer on-duty command officers (per capita) than any other department in the metro area. Baltimore County has only three command officers on duty at any given time. Similar-sized jurisdictions (Montgomery County, Prince George’s County, Baltimore City) typically have six to 10 command officers on duty. These departments understand how essential it is to provide adequate command and control on the fireground by enabling command officers to reach the incident scene quickly.

By virtue of the limited number of command officers in Baltimore County, each officer is responsible for a very large geographic area (battalion). Therefore, response times for command officers are excessive. It is not unusual for battalion chiefs to take 20 or even 25 minutes to respond to an incident. These chiefs arrive too late to command incidents during the critical early stages of the fire attack, which is typically when things go wrong — sometimes very wrong.

On Jan. 11, 2011, it took approximately 20 minutes for the initial battalion chief to arrive at the fire that claimed Mark Falkenhan’s life. Upon arrival, that chief immediately made the determination that the building was not safe for interior firefighting operations; he ordered the evacuation of the building. Seconds later, Mark transmitted the “Mayday,” signaling that he was trapped in a third floor apartment. What would have happened if the battalion chief had arrived one minute (or even 30 seconds) earlier that day?

This past Wednesday, firefighter Gene Kirchner, 25, of the Reisterstown Volunteer Fire Company was critically injured during a house fire with people trapped. Although the facts surrounding his injuries are yet to be determined, it seems highly likely that in this case too, his injuries resulted in part from the delayed response of a command officer. The command officer was responding from the Woodlawn/Catonsville area, as would normally be the case. A response from that location to Reisterstown takes about 15 minutes.

Excessive response time; fire involving trapped civilians; critical firefighter injuries. Coincidence?

I joined the Baltimore County Fire Department in 1987, when the department had six battalion chiefs on duty on each shift. Today, there are just three battalion chiefs on duty on each shift. Each chief oversees 16-20 stations. Each chief covers more than 200 square miles. Unlike other departments in the region that assign multiple chief officers on structure fires, Baltimore County dispatches just one. Baltimore County’s fire and EMS personnel are at unacceptable risk of injury and death because there are too few command officers.

I retired as a division chief in February 2012. Throughout my tenure, I remained vehemently opposed to the reduction in command staff that occurred during the 1990s. There are a number of reasons I decided to retire, but my inability to convince the administration of the need to improve command staffing levels (especially in light of Mark’s death) was certainly a factor. I didn’t want to be the chief-in-charge of an incident at which we lost another firefighter whose death might have been prevented by enhancing command staffing.

Two months following my retirement, I met with County Executive Kevin Kamenetz. I wanted him to hear from me how dire this situation is. I told him I feared that if command staffing did not improve, another incident would claim the life of a firefighter in Baltimore County. To Gene, the Kirchner family, and to all my brothers and sisters in the Baltimore County Fire Service, I’m praying I was wrong.

Mayday audio: From Baltimore County, MD fire that critically injured Reisterstown VFC Firefighter Gene Kirchner.

3 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”) 

Earlier coverage

Above is audio from alertpage of this morning’s mayday at a fire in Baltimore County, Maryland that left Reisterstown VFC Firefighter Gene Kirchner in critical condition.  Firefighter Kirchner was found unconscious on the 2nd floor. A 58-year-old man was found dead in the house. The mayday call is heard at 6:45 into the video. Time has been condensed for this recording with pauses removed. Below is an update to this morning’s story.

WMAR-TV:

Gene Kirchner was one of the initial crews that responded and was found unconscious on the 2nd floor.  Rescue crews had to take him out. A mayday was called during the fire.

He was taken to Northwest Hospital and is now at Shock Trauma.

Kirchner, and has been with the Reisterstown Volunteer Fire Company for 8 years. In addition to being a volunteer firefighter, Kirchner is an employee of Butler Medical Transport.

“He’s (Kirchner) a kindhearted person who goes out of his way to help anybody,” says Butler Medical Transport Chief Operating Officer William Rosenberg.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Baltimore County, MD Firefighter Gene Kirchner in critical condition after mayday at fatal house fire. Member of Reisterstown VFC.

2 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”) 

Reisterstown VFC

The Secret List:

The dwelling, a two-story Victorian, was used as a few separate apartments, and was less than a quarter-mile from the closest fire company, so they arrived quickly. On arrival they had heavy fire and smoke. When they went inside, they found Steven Stark, 58, on the second floor. He was taken to Northwest Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

At some point, volunteer Firefighter Gene Kirchner, 24, issued a mayday call from inside the home. Firefighters found him unconscious, rescued him and transported him to Northwest Hospital, then to Baltimore Shock Trauma, where his condition is critical. What happened and why is unknown yet.

WMAR-TV:

A 24-year-old volunteer firefighter is now in critical condition after  working at a  3-alarm  fire in Reisterstown  early Wednesday morning.

Gene Kirchner was one of the initial crews that responded and was found  unconscious on the 2nd floor.  Rescue crews had to take him out. A mayday  was called during the fire.

Baltimore Sun:

Steven Stark, 58, of the unit block of Hanover Road, was found in an upstairs hallway of his home during an intense search and rescue effort and transported to Northwest Hospital Center, where he was pronounced dead, said Captain Rich Schenning, a department spokesman.

Kirchner, whose exact age was not immediately available, was resuscitated at the scene and transported to Northwest Hospital Center before being transferred to Maryland Shock Trauma Center, where he was listed in critical condition Wednesday morning, Schenning said.

Firefighters conducting a secondary search of the home located Stark, Schenning said. 

WJZ-TV:

Volunteer firefighter Gene Kirchner was unconscious when removed from the home and is now in critical condition at Shock Trauma.

Kirchner is a seven-year veteran of the Reisterstown Volunteer Fire Department.

There’s no word on what caused the fire.

WBAL-TV:

Firefighters were met by  heavy fire and smoke. When they went inside, they said they found Steven Stark,  58, on the second floor. He was taken to Northwest Hospital, where he was  pronounced dead.

Baltimore County fire  officials said a volunteer firefighter, identified as Gene Kirchner, 24, issued  a mayday call and collapsed inside the home. Crews found him and took him to  Northwest Hospital. He was then transferred to Shock Trauma, where his condition  isn’t known.

Officials said the bulk of  the fire was held to the back portion of the house. Fire investigators are still  looking for the cause. 11 News has learned that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,  Firearms and Explosives has been called in to assist.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Raw video: Wounded West Webster firefighters tell their story.

No comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”) 

 Previous coverage of this story

WHAM-TV:

For the first time the two West Webster firefighters wounded in an attack on Christmas Eve are sharing their stories.

Ted Scardino and Joseph Hofstetter are holding (held) a news conference about the ambush that injured them both and killed two other firefighters.

According to 13WHAM’s Patrice Walsh, who is at the press conference, Scardino started by thanking the community for the outpouring of support.

He said, “I can’t tell you how many times I walk in Wegmans and people thank me.”

When asked about that day, Scardino said “I heard pop, pop, pop. Chip said we’re being shot at.”

Hofstetter added, “I didn’t know what was happening until I was shot. You don’t expect people to fire at you. I was focused on not wanting any more people hurt and self- preservation.”

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Webster police officers tell their stories of ambush. Return fire by first cop on scene cited with saving lives. Police chief talks about motive.

No comments

Are you keeping up with STATter911.com on Facebook? You will find more fire & EMS news & videos by clicking here & choosing “like”.

 Previous coverage of this story

At a news conference on Monday Webster Police Chief Gerald Pickering recognized his officers involved in the Christmas Eve ambush that killed West Webster Firefighters Mike Chiapperini and Tomasz Kaczowka and wounded Firefighters Ted Scardino and Joe Hofstetter. The officers’ stories were also shared publicly and the chief talked about William Spengler Jr’s motive.

DemocratandChronicle.com:

“After his mother died in October, he was extremely upset that money was donated to the West Webster Fire Department in her memory,” said Pickering, though he added that authorities may never know what triggered Spengler’s actions on Christmas Eve.

Spengler, armed with three guns and more than 400 rounds of ammunition, fired 58 shots in total. But once Reed returned fire, Spengler was left with three options, said Pickering: He could either be apprehended by police, die in a shootout, or take his own life.

Spengler chose the latter option, running about 200 or 300 feet west along a berm by Lake Ontario before heading towards the rocks and shooting himself.

“He never expected police to return fire,” said Pickering.

WHAM-TV:

It was Webster Police Officer Mark Reed who arrived on scene before the first fire truck.  Gunman William Spengler did not open fire until that fire truck arrived, and shortly after that Officer Reed returned fire with the assault rifle issued to him in his patrol car.

“He (Reed) saved I can’t tell you how many lives he probably saved because as they said this guy was prepared to keep shooting,” Sgt. Hall said of Reed’s actions.  “(We) probably would’ve lost a lot more fireman and then the policemen responding to help the firemen, if we didn’t have the advantage that Mark Reed gave us. We probably would’ve lost some of ours.  So he saved a lot of lives.”

WHEC-TV:

Sgt. Kevin Hall, Webster Police Department, said, “You can only imagine the chaos there between the fire and you’re hearing shots, and there are fire personnel on the ground, the fire truck is crashed into the side of the road. It was just absolute chaos.”

When Sergeant Hall arrived to the scene on Lake Road Christmas Eve morning, his colleague, Mark Reed, was already there, shooting at William Spengler.

Sgt. Hall said, “You are surrounded by water. It’s very dark, very cold windy. There was a fireman down and I thought I had an opportunity that while Officer Reed and the suspect were engaged with each other I’d have an opportunity  to sneak it and retrieve the fireman.”

That downed firefighter would end up being 19-year-old Tomasz Kaczowka. So Hall grabbed his ballistic shield from his car to try and help the firefighter.

Sgt. Hall said, “I thought that he was initially just laying on the ground kind of covering himself from the shots fired.  So I thought when I ran up I would just pat him on the back and say lets get out of here an he’d get up and we’d run away. As soon as I put my hand on him I realized that it was gonna happen.”

Sgt. Hall said, “I realized that I couldn’t help him and I was in a very bad position to begin with and that’s when I retreated back to the vehicle and retrieved my weapon.”

Watch live coverage of funeral for Firefighter Mike Chiapperini, West Webster Fire Department

2 comments

Webster update: Police say killer William Spengler was with woman when she purchased guns in 2010. Read charges against Dawn Nguyen.

10 comments

Are you keeping up with STATter911.com on Facebook? You will find more fire & EMS news & videos by clicking here & choosing “like”.

Previous coverage

Read criminal complaint against Dawn Nguyen

WHEC-TV:

Dawn Nguyen, of Greece, faces a federal charge of knowingly making a false statement, U.S. Attorney William Hochul said. She also was charged with a state count of filing a falsified business record, State Police Senior Investigator James Sewell said.    

Sewell said the charges are connected to the purchase of an AR-15 semiautomatic rifle and a 12-gauge shotgun that William Spengler had with him Monday when firefighters Michael Chiapperini and Tomasz Kaczowka were gunned down. Three other people were wounded before the 62-year-old Spengler killed himself. He also had a .38-caliber revolver, but Nguyen is not connected to that gun, Sewell said.    

Hochul said Nguyen bought the guns on June 6, 2010, on behalf of Spengler, who as a convicted felon was barred from possessing weapons.

DemocratandChronicle.com:

Spengler was with Nguyen, a former Lake Road neighbor, when the weapons were purchased at the Gander Mountain sporting goods store in Henrietta on June 7, 2010, Hochul said. The rambling letter Spengler left behind, which Hochul described as a “suicide note,” informed authorities that the guns had come from the daughter of a neighbor.

Hochul and others at the afternoon news conference described Nguyen’s alleged actions as a “straw purchase,” in which one person intentionally and knowingly buys guns for another. Spengler could not legally own or purchase guns because of a felony conviction: he bludgeoned his grandmother to death in 1980.

The felony with which Nguyen is charged carries a sentence of up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Webster update: Woman arrested & home raided in connection to guns used in ambush that killed & wounded firefighters.

1 comment

DemocratandChronicle article shows arrest of Dawn Nguyen.

Are you keeping up with STATter911.com on Facebook? You will find more fire & EMS news & videos by clicking here & choosing “like”.

Previous coverage here, here, here, here, here, here & here

Click here for new details, arrest video & charging documents

A press conference is scheduled for 4:00 PM EST today to discuss new developments in the case. News reports say a Greece, New York woman is now in custody as part of the investigation into how William Spengler Jr., a convicted felon, obtained the guns used to ambush West Webster firefighters.

DemocratandChronicle:

Around 1:40 p.m., New York State Police, Webster Police and the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives descended on the Alpine Road home, where Dawn Nguyen and her mother, Dawn Welsher, were staying.

Senior Investigator James Newell of the state police said Nguyen was charged with offering a false instrument for filing. He also said a federal charge is pending, though he did not specify.

“She purchased the weapons legally, and they were stolen,” Nguyen’s lawyer, Dave Palmiere, said Friday. He said Nguyen doesn’t recall whether she reported the guns stolen.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Webster update: News reports say arrest imminent of person(s) who supplied William Spengler guns used in ambush. Autopsy results released. Chicago Fire episode brings complaints.

2 comments

Above, community helping with hotel rooms for relatives & visiting firefighters planning to attend funerals.

Are you keeping up with STATter911.com on Facebook? You will find more fire & EMS news & videos by clicking here & choosing “like”.

 Previous coverage here, here, here, here, here & here

The two to three page typewritten note left behind by murderer William Spengler Jr. is described as taunting at times and is apparently leading law enforcement to understand how the convicted felon was able to obtain the weapons used to kill two firefighters and wound two others. Those guns are a Bushmaster .223-caliber rifle, a Mossberg 12-gauge shotgun, and a Smith & Wesson .38-caliber handgun.

David Andreatta, DemocratandChronicle.com:

The note penned by William Spengler Jr. prior to his deadly ambush of firefighters in Webster explained how a female former neighbor and her daughter helped him acquire the guns he used in the attack, according to law enforcement officials with knowledge of the investigation.

The officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Thursday that criminal charges against at least one, perhaps both, of the women were imminent.

How Spengler obtained the guns has been of intense interest to investigators because Spengler’s criminal history prevented him from legally owning firearms. He pleaded guilty in 1981 to a felony manslaughter charge for killing his grandmother with a hammer a year earlier.

Also, preliminary autopsy results from the investigation have been released.

WHEC-TV:

The Webster Police Department and the New York State Police have released autopsy results from the Monroe County Medical Examiner’s Office.

Michael Chiapperini died as a result of a single gunshot wound and Tomasz Kaczowka died as a result of two gunshot wounds.

The suspect, William Spengler, died as a result of a self-inflicted gunshot to his head. There was no evidence of any other gunshot wounds to Spengler.

In other news surrounding Monday’s ambush, WHEC-TV is apologizing for running Wednesday’s episode of Chicago Fire, which was a repeat of a November episode involving firefighters and gunfire.

Brian Stetler, The New York Times:

An NBC station in upstate New York expressed regret on Thursday for televising a repeat of “Chicago Fire,” a network drama about firefighters, that bore resemblances to a real-life Christmas Eve shooting there.

Fans of the show criticized NBC for rerunning the episode because it, in the words of the network’s description, portrayed two firefighters “pinned down by gunfire while trying to help the victim of a gang shooting.” In Webster, N.Y., on Monday, two firefighters were killed and two others were injured after a man lured them into a trap by setting a fire. The man later killed himself.

A Statement from WHEC-TV Vice President & General Manager, Derek Dalton:

Last night, NBC, our network, ran an episode of Chicago Fire that many in our community felt was insensitive in light of the Christmas Eve tragedy.

We understand and regret the timing of this episode.  By no means did we, or NBC, intend any disrespect to the families or our community affected by the recent events in Webster.

All of us in the WHEC-TV family have a personal connection to our community and our firefighters.  Our thoughts and prayers are with the families and we will continue to cover this story with compassion. 

Fireground audio: Explosion & fire in Indianapolis that killed two & destroyed homes.

5 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

Previous coverage of this story

Teresa Mackin, WISH-TV:

Hundreds gathered Sunday evening in Greenwood to remember one of their own.

Second grade teacher Jennifer Longworth and her husband Dion were the two victims of Saturday night’s tragic explosion on the city’s south side.

Jennifer Longworth taught at Southwest Elementary for twelve years, said co-workers Sunday.

Co-workers, friends, family, students and parents all gathered outside for a candlelight vigil.

They laid flowers and candles near the flagpole outside, and wrote messages to Mrs. Longworth on a poster board.

Rick Callahan & Charles Wilson, Associated Press:

Splintered beams and boards on a piece of charred earth were all that remained Sunday where three Indianapolis homes were leveled in a blast that killed two people and rendered homes for blocks uninhabitable.

A backhoe raked through the rubble in the middle-class subdivision as clusters of firefighters and rescue workers weary from a long, chaotic day that began late the night before waited for their next assignment.

The two-story, brick-faced homes on either side of those demolished by the blast were in ruins. One home’s roof was gone, a blackened husk left behind. On the other side of the gap, the side of a home was sheared off. Across the street, garage doors had buckled from the heat.

It wasn’t yet clear what caused the blast that shook the neighborhood at 11 p.m. Saturday. Residents described hearing a loud boom that blew out windows and collapsed ceilings. Some thought a plane had crashed or that it was an earthquake.

Teacher, husband remembered at vigil

Alex Pflanzer, who was asleep when the nearby homes were leveled, said he heard his wife screaming and thought someone was breaking into his house. Grabbing his gun, he checked the house and saw the front door was standing open.

“I walked outside and all the houses were on fire,” he said.

Pflanzer, his wife and two dogs were staying in a hotel room Sunday night. They were, however, without their cat, who refused to budge from the crawl space.

Deputy Code Enforcement Director Adam Collins said as many as 31 homes were damaged so badly that they may have to be demolished. The explosion damaged a total of 80 homes, he said. He estimated the damage at $3.6 million.

Some residents were allowed to return to their homes to retrieve a few belongings Sunday under police escort, officials said. Others whose homes weren’t as badly damaged were allowed to go home, but officials said they would have to do without electricity overnight.

Deputy Fire Chief Kenny Bacon said investigators haven’t eliminated any possible causes for the blast. But U.S. Rep. Andre Carson, who represents the area, said he had been told a bomb or meth lab explosion had been ruled out.

Along with the two people killed, seven people were taken to a hospital with injuries, Bacon said.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Two dead in Indianapolis explosion. 18 homes leveled or damaged.

6 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

AP:

A roaring explosion that leveled two homes and set two others ablaze in a huge fire forced about 200 people from a devastated Indianapolis neighborhood where at least two people werr killed, authorities said Sunday. The powerful nighttime blast shattered windows, crumpled walls and inflicted other damage on at least 14 other homes. 

Two people were taken to a hospital with minor injuries after the explosion and fire, said Lieut. Bonnie Hensley, with the Indianapolis Fire Department. She said firefighters later put out the flames and searchers then went through the rubble and damaged homes one at a time in case others were left behind. At least one body has been recovered.

Some witnesses said in televised reports that they heard people screaming “help me! help me!” after the explosion and fire and that two parents and two children were safely pulled from one house that caught fire.

“This looks like a war zone; it really does,” Hensley told The Associated Press. “Police officers and fire department officials remain at the scene searching for other possible victims.” She said they used search lights until dawn as they peered into the damaged and ruined homes.

She declined to identify the only confirmed fatality, saying only that the body was found in one of the leveled homes after the fire was put out. Fire officials told AP after daybreak that they were not immediately releasing any further information until later Sunday morning. 

The explosion at 11 p.m. Saturday destroyed two houses that were side by side and spread fire to two other nearby homes in the neighborhood on the south side of Indianapolis, she said, adding at least 14 other homes were damaged in the area by the blast’s shock wave or flying debris it kicked up.

The blast was heard for miles all around, and authorities said they had no immediate information on the cause. An investigation by fire and other agencies was under way. Reports said the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives also was involved. 

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

‘Person of interest’ brought in for questioning in Los Angeles arsons. 12 new fires overnight. 55 fires so far.

2 comments

Previous coverage 

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit "like")

Two recent LAFD Alerts:

FIRE's 1/2/2012

*UPDATE: * ARSON FIRES * A person of interest has been detained and is being questioned. It is too early to speculate if this person responsible for spree arson fires. – Erik Scott###
Posted by LAFD Media and Public Relations at 1/02/2012 03:55:00 AM 

FIRE's 1/2/2012

*UPDATE: * ARSON FIRES * A total of 55 fires of concern have broke out in the Los Angeles area over the last four days from 12/30/11 to 01/02/12. 45 fires in the Los Angeles area, nine in West Hollywood, and one in Burbank. – Erik Scott###
Posted by LAFD Media and Public Relations at 1/02/2012 04:57:00 AM  

Do you want to sell a rig?Click HERE to find out how withSellFireTrucks.com

Video released of possible suspect in Los Angeles arsons. 43 fires since Thursday. LAFD pushing out info over multiple platforms.

No comments

Details from LAFD News and Information blog

LAFD Photostream

LAFD Facebook page

#LAArson on Twitter

Listen live to LAFD

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit "like")

From the AP:

Police in Los Angeles distributed DVDs on Sunday featuring surveillance video of a man wanted for questioning in connection with a rash of suspicious car fires in the city.

The person of interest is a white male between 20 and 30 years old with a receding hairline and a shoulder-length ponytail, according to Officer Sara Faden. The man was seen on video Saturday after emerging on foot from inside an underground parking structure on Hollywood Boulevard that was the scene of a car fire.

Detectives estimated the man, who was wearing a bulky jacket, is between 5’6" and 6’1" tall.

Faden said investigators are asking for the public’s help in identifying the man on the video.

Detectives spent early Sunday analyzing security video camera footage and following up on other leads after a half dozen more vehicles were set on fire on New Year’s Eve.

The outbreak of arson fires has left a trail of smoldering debris in Hollywood, West Hollywood, North Hollywood and the Fairfax district of Los Angeles since Thursday.

Authorities said they were investigating a total of 43 suspicious fires. Most of those fires were set in parked cars. In several cases, flames have jumped to carports and apartment units.

"They are working on hundreds of clues, interviewing dozens of witnesses, picking up countless pieces of evidence," police Cmdr. Andrew Smith said of the detectives.

LAFD is keeping the public informed on its news & information page, Facebook, Twitter, breaking news widget, photostream and text and email alerts. Click here to learn more.

Do you want to sell a rig?Click HERE to find out how withSellFireTrucks.com

DC’s Chuckie Ryan headed back to work. Firefighter was burned in April arson.

3 comments

Previous coverage of this story

From WJLA-TV:

A D.C. firefighter who spent months in the hospital following an injury on the job is getting ready to head back to work.

Chuck Ryan was severely injured battling a house fire in April. Five other firefighters were also injured in the blaze, but none as severely as Ryan.

"My biggest thing about coming back is that I will get to the next chapter in my life,” Ryan told ABC7 News exclusively.

Ryan and Rescue Squad 3 were inside a burning house on 48th Place for only minutes on April 8 when the fire flashed over.

"It started getting hot and the smoke started changing, signs of a flashover,” Ryan said. The heat spiked to 2300 hundred degrees.

"My gear was on fire, everything, and my face piece started to melt,” Ryan said. "Just because you go inside of a burning structure doesn't always mean you are going to come out."

Ryan held his face mask in place – that saved his life.

"They didn't think we were going to make it through the night,” he said of doctors at the hospital.

Forty percent of Ryan’s body was covered in 2nd and 3rd degree burns. But even while recovering, Ryan longed to return to his job.

"From the moment I woke up in intensive care, all I was looking forward to was going back to work,” he said.

He was able to leave the hospital 49 days later and continue the even tougher days at home.

With the help of his 15-year-old daughter Shelby and 21-year-old son TJ, Ryan's wife Kathy took 80 days off from work. She had to change her husband’s bandages twice a day, painful three to four-hour sessions.

"I have a wonderful wife and best friend that is just amazing. I don't know how many people would have to be able to do what she did,” Ryan said.

He almost lost four fingers, but has healed now with his grip back to 100 percent. So is his spirit.

"Every day before you go to work it is like getting ready to go to Walt Disney World," Ryan said.

The arsonist who caused the house fire that injured Ryan and his colleagues was sentenced to 25 years in prison.

 

DC arrest: Investigators say man who set fire injuring five firefighters is serial arsonist. Man falsely claimed he was a MD volunteer.

4 comments

Read charging documents

Previous coverage of April 8 fire

District of Columbia fire investigators, along with agents of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, announced at a press conference today they have made an arrest in the April 8 fire at 811 48th Place that critically burned Firefighter Chuck Ryan and injured four other DC firefighters.

Maurice Dews, 26, was picked up after a fire Tuesday night across the street from the April 8 fire. In addition, Dews is accused of setting a fire on June 14 at 4501 Grant St. NE.

Investigators say Dews also falsely claimed he was a volunteer firefighter from Bladensburg, Maryland. According to the investigators, Dews has called 911 about nine separate fires in DC and Maryland since 2007.

Charging documents indicate that Dews already was suspected in the series of arsons before Tuesday's fire. In fact, Dews called a DC fire investigator who had previously interviewed him to report information shortly after the fire Tuesday evening. This lead to Dews' arrest.

Raw video: Seven-alarms in Camden, New Jersey. Third major fire in two weeks.

5 comments

More from PhillyFireNews.com

Dave Hernandez Photo

For the third time in two weeks there has been a major fire in Camden, New Jersey. The fire was reported around 5:00 this morning at a factory that used to make cleaning products like detergents. Above is video from Dave Hernandez. Here is what Dave wrote about the fire:

Engine 9 arrived on location with a 3 story vacant building. Engine 9 reported all hands going to work and to strike the second and third alarms due to heavy fire conditions. Fire was very doubtful will hold. The fire went to 7 alarms. A pipeline was established due to low water pressure. No injuries were reported.

From philly.com::

About 100 homes in Camden's east end are without power as a result of the seven-alarm fire that ravaged an abandoned chemical plant Sunday morning.

Roof collapses at the former Concord Chemical Inc. were reported, but no injuries. Authorities said only one nearby residence had to be evacuated

Frederick, Maryland firefighter accused of trying to set seriously ill ATF agent’s home on fire. Police say Independent Hose volunteer claims he’s in love with the woman.

1 comment

A firefighter with the Independent Hose Company of Frederick, Maryland has been charged with attempted arson. According to Frederick Police, 43-year-old John Christopher Woods, who has been a volunteer member for more than 15 years, was arrested early Thursday morning after a police officer saw him using a gas grill in an effort to set the home on fire. Brian Englar at the Frederick News-Post reports the home belongs to the parents of an ATF agent. The agent had been living at the home while being treated for a serious illness, but she was not in the house at the time.

Woods told police he was having chest pains and he was taken to a local hospital after his arrest.

Englar reports the following from the charging documents:

He talked to police from the hospital, telling them that he had been friends with the woman, who is an agent with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, for more than 20 years and that he was in love with her.

He said he had never been romantically involved with the woman.

Woods said he had left a note on her door in February when he was having marital problems and needed someone to talk to, the documents state.

He said she had not responded and was not returning his calls.

He was informed the woman was ill and had moved in with her parents. Woods said she told him in December that she was sick, but he didn't believe her.

Woods was suspended from the fire company after his arrest.

Read additional details from Englar's article.