Skip to content


Helmet-cam video: House fire in Derby, CT.

5 comments

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

Helmet-cam video from firstduefirephotos of a fire on Thursday on Derby Avenue in Derby, Connecticut.

CTPost.com:

A fire heavily damaged a Derby  Avenue house Thursday morning and forced firefighters to temporarily leave  the home after the attic collapsed.

Firefighters later re-entered the house at 228 Derby Ave. when it was safe,  after receiving reports that someone was inside. No one was found.

The fire broke out about 9 a.m., officials said. The house is located across  from the Beau Vue Arms condominium complex.

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

Raw video: House fire in Wallingford, CT.

6 comments

Video from myrecordjournal of a house fire on Dutton Street in Wallingford, Connecticut yesterday afternoon.

WTNH-TV:

A Wallingford home is uninhabitable after a fire on Tuesday afternoon. The fire department says when they arrived to 18 Dutton Street at 2:06 PM, there was heavy smoke showing from the second floor.

Crews noticed the fire spread to the third floor and it took over an hour to knock down the fire.

Raw video: House fire in Meriden, CT.

4 comments

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

Matt Van Ness video (MeridenFireVideos) from a fire in a vacant house late Sunday morning at 15 Hobart Street in Meriden, Connecticut. More info here.

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

Raw video: One man dead after two multi-family homes burn in Waterbury, CT.

13 comments

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

Video above from vicsan191 and video below by FortWhenTea and Tom DeMatteis of a fire Saturday in Waterbury, Connecticut that left one man dead and injured three firefighters.

Shawn Beals & Crystal Hall, CTNow.com:

One person is dead as a result of a fire that heavily damaged two three-story homes at Tremont and Sudbury streets on Saturday afternoon, officials said.

The victim lived on the third floor, and firefighters were able to get him out of the house as it was burning, Deputy Fire Chief Stephen Ayotte said. The man was taken to Waterbury Hospital, where he died, he said.

Ayotte said three firefighters were injured, and were treated at Watebury Hospital.

“There is a lot of damage to both buildings. They’re pretty well gutted,” Ayotte said. “The fire had a head start. Both houses were pretty well involved by the time we got there.”

Laraine Weschler, Republican-American:

Seven families, including 12 adults and three children, were displaced when two houses on Sudbury Street caught fire Saturday, according to a spokesman for the American Red Cross.

The fire also killed 47-year-old Victor Rivera, who died in a third-floor apartment in one of the houses.

A must see for fire videographers. New camera’s test run gives fascinating view of a fire.

10 comments

- First footage from the new Phantom Flex4K – “Let me know when you see Fire” from Gregory Wilson on Vimeo.

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

News producer, volunteer firefighter and STATter911.com reader Adam Bearne sent me a Tweet this morning alerting me to this video posted by cinematographer Greg Wilson. Anyone interested in videography and photography will find this test of the Phantom Flex4K Digital Cinema Camera quite interesting. Even if you are not into cameras, I think you will find this view of a fire very compelling. The video is directed by Brendan Bellomo. According to Wilson, the two were asked by Vision Research and Abel CineTech to shoot the first test footage with the camera still in its alpha prototype stage.  Here’s more from Greg Wilson on Vimeo.com:

All the live action footage was shot on March 24th, 2013. Some additional fire elements were shot on the 23rd and 25th of March with the Hebron and Glastonbury Fire Departments in Connecticut. We were thrilled with the camera’s performance at this early stage of its development and are very much looking forward to this camera as it matures prior to it’s release this fall. This is a true 4K RAW camera capable of at 1000fps at 4K resolution.

Thanks to our great crew, including lead Phantom camera technician Edward Richardson, VRI and Abel CineTech for giving us the opportunity to shoot with this amazing new camera system. For more info check out twitter.com/phantomflex4k

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

 

There’s more: CT FD wants $12,000 back it used to convince chief who was ‘dating’ jr. member to step down last fall because of an earlier harassment issue.

4 comments

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

Previous coverage of this story here & here

A letter to the editor of the Hartford Courant from a citizen reacts to reporter David Owens’ story that some firefighters viewed 53-year-old Chief Joseph Carilli and a a 15-year-old junior member as a “dating couple” but didn’t report anything to authorities. Here’s an excerpt from the letter by Susan Marcey of Manchester:

The fact that his fellow firefighters didn’t report this is totally unacceptable. 

Any different from Joe Paterno?  They should all be fired from the force. 

Now it will be interesting to see the reaction of the public to the latest news about the former chief and the details of how he became the former chief last September.  According to WFSB-TV, the Coventry Volunteer Fire Association Inc. paid Carilli $12,000 when he was forced to resign as chief after being accused of harassing female employees at a Dunkin’ Donuts.

Les Besthoff, WFSB-TV:

Town officials confirmed that Joseph Carilli secretly received a $12,000 payout when he stepped down as chief of the South Coventry Fire Department last fall.

Town officials also confirm the Coventry Volunteer Fire Association intends to recover the money given to Carilli, possibly by suing him.

One of the interesting things about this is that Carilli didn’t just take the money and run. Even with his criminal record of serving an eight month sentence in the 80s after a sexual encounter with a 14-year-old girl, and the embarrassing series of incidents at Dunkin’ Donuts, Carilli was allowed to remain as the department’s training officer.

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

Firefighters believed chief with well known sexual criminal past & junior member were a ‘dating couple’. But no one said anything?

29 comments

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

Previous coverage of this story

Read many more details from arrest warrant in Hartford Courant article

With the exception of giving my professional analysis on news coverage and how it is handled I really do my best not to pass judgment on most of these stories that pass through my hands to you. My philosophy is that you should make up your own minds without me telling you how to feel. I am also an extremely flawed individual who does his best to try and not judge others. But there are times when you just can’t help yourself (remember, I am flawed). After reading the sordid details of the the chief and lieutenant of Connecticut’s South Coventry Fire Department charged with having sex with junior members I’ve experienced one of those times where I find it hard to be quiet.

As horrible as this whole story is, in some ways the worst part to me may not be that Joseph Carilli, a 53-year-old chief, was having sex with a 15-year-old junior member in the “firehouse, the board of directors room, the firehouse attic, his house and the fire department substation” and apparently got her pregnant. What may be worse is the reaction and inaction of the rest of the department.

Here’s why I say this. Carilli had a past criminal history that included a conviction and jail time over a sexual incident involving a 14-year-old girl during the 1980s. This was well known and was a controversy that made news in 2006 when Carilli became chief. Many of us would likely say this man had no business supervising a program that involved young teenagers. But those in charge stood by their man and decided to let Carilli remain in his position. Now comes the real troubling part for me.

You would think the leadership and members of the department, after standing by their chief during the controversy would now have an extra obligation to the community, its junior firefighters and the parents of those young members to be on guard for even the slightest indication the chief was up to his old ways and immediately take action. You and I might think that, but the article by the Hartford Courant’s David Owens, based on details in the arrest warrant, says something completely different happened:

Firefighters interviewed by police said they often saw the girl with Carilli, and based upon their actions, flirting, and the amount of time they were together said they appeared to be a “dating couple.” Several of those firefighters said they did not notify authorities about the “illegal relationship because Carilli was ‘careful’ and they had no solid evidence to prove a relationship.”

Really? You believed your 53-year-old chief, who previously spent time in jail for having sex with a minor, was “dating” a 15-year-old junior member and you didn’t notify anyone about your suspicions. Really?

I know it’s easy for me to second guess and I probably should just keep my mouth shut because I don’t know all of the facts and have all of the evidence. But keeping your mouth shut is exactly what the firefighters who saw the chief “dating” the 15-year-old girl did and the best I can tell it didn’t serve anyone well.

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

CT former chief & lieutenant arrested on charges they had sex with jr. firefighters. Chief served jail time after similar arrest 30-years-ago.

11 comments

Former chief Joseph Michael Carilli (l) and Lt. Joe Fragoso (r).

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

When Joseph Carilli became chief of Connecticut’s Coventry Volunteer Fire Association in 2006 he made the news. That’s because Carilli had served eight months in prison in 1985 when he was 24-years-old after being accused of sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl. According to Courant.com, Carilli told reporters in 2006,  ”It was a very bad situation and it should have never occurred. I’ve changed my life 180 degrees since then.” If the news over the last six months is any guide, it appears Chief Carilli really changed his life 360 degrees.

First, was his forced resignation as chief in September after the store manager and two employees of Dunkin’ Donuts on Main Street claimed that on several occaisions Chief Carilli used language that made them uncomfortable. And now, the 53-year-old Carilli, who remained training officer for the department, is under arrest again. Carilli and Lieutenant Joe Fragoso, age 35. are accused of having sexual contact with some of the department’s junior firefighters, ages 14 to 17.

WVIT-TV:

Police have charged Joseph Michael Carilli, 55 of Coventry, the department’s training officer, with sexual assault in the second degree and risk of injury to a minor. Joe Fragoso, 35 of Coventry, a second lieutenant, was charged with second-degree sexual assault.

Police said the investigation revealed that both subjects had been having sexual relations with members of the CVFA Junior Firefighter program, where 14-to-17-year-old teens participate in training, emergency calls and public education.

Police said the fire fighters turned themselves in at the Coventry Police Department after learning that there were warrants for their arrest.

David Owens, Courant.com:

Fragoso has been a fire lieutenant with the department since June 2012.

Police said their investigation found that both men had sexual relations with members of the department’s Junior Firefighter program.

Police said the Coventry Volunteer Fire Association’s current leadership cooperated with the police investigation.

Coventry Police Chief Mark Palmer said the investigation continues and asked that anyone with further information call police at 860-742-7331 and ask for Sgt. Michael McDonagh or Det. Michael Hicks.

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

Early raw video: Bridgeport, CT police cover firefighters as they rescue woman from burning home after initial report indicated shots fired.

8 comments

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

WTIC Radio:

It was a wild scene in Bridgeport after an initial report of shots fired in a home. When police arrived on Roberts Street around 9:30, they encountered fire.

Upon arrival, firefighters found a woman hanging out a third-floor window. She was rescued. Due to the reports of gunfire, firefighters had to attack from the outside until police gave the all clear. That’s when officers found a man on the third floor, who they took out through the rear of the home.

CTPost.com:

“This was a fluid, fast-moving situation and our police officers and firefighters did an outstanding job,” Mayor Bill Finch said.

Police initially went to 158 Robert St. to investigate reports of shots fired.

But then a fire broke out and firefighters were called to the scene in time to see an unidentified woman exiting a third-floor window.

The fire department used a ladder to rescue her but could not enter the house until police probed the possible shooting.

The city’s SWAT team searched the first floor. They forced a door on the second story and found an unidentified man with burns lying on the floor.

Fire Chief Brian Rooney praised his crew for not hesitating to help the woman despite the possibility an armed suspect was there.

WVIT-TV:

A man is in critical condition and a woman has been rescued after emergency workers responded to 158 Roberts St. in Bridgeport for report of gunshots, then fire at house, according to Bridgeport police.

The police and fire departments, as well as the National Guard, responded and treated this as an active shooter situation, but police said on Wednesday afternoon that it doesn’t appear that there was a gun.

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

Helmet-cam videos: Back to back garage fires for Unionville, CT fire company.

4 comments

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

Above is video from Paul Krause of the first of back to back garage fires handled by Tunxis Hose Company No. 1 in Unionville, Connecticut on January 21. The second one is below.

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

Response to Violent Incidents: Nine Questions You Should Ask.

No comments

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

We are turning the blog over to a fire chief this evening. He is John Oates of the East Hartford Fire Department in Connecticut. For more than five years Chief Oates has been working with the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation, looking at how firefighters respond and handle violent incidents. Today, the Foundation, along with the IAFC, CFSI, NFPA, and NVFC, released some very important material on this topic that should be in the hands of all firefighters, company officers and fire chiefs.
 
The key item is titled Nine Questions You Should Ask. And it’s simply that, nine questions that should be a key part of any conversation on dealing with the large variety of violent incidents faced by firefighters every day. It’s important to note, as the tragic events in Webster, New York showed, not every violent incident can be anticipated. But Chief Oates, the NFFF and the other organizations believe that being prepared can often make a difference.
 

Here are the nine questions followed by the article by Chief Oates.

  1. Do you use risk/benefit analysis for every call?
  2. Do you have an effective relationship at all levels with the law enforcement agencies in your community?
  3. How good is the information you get from your dispatcher?
  4. Do you allow members to “first respond” directly to the scene?
  5. Does your law enforcement agency use an incident management system?
  6. When responding to a potentially violent incident, do you seek out a law enforcement officer when you arrive?
  7. Have you told your fire officers/personnel that it is OK to leave the scene if things start to turn bad?
  8. Is there a point where you don’t respond or limit your response to violent incidents?
  9. Is your uniform easily mistaken for law enforcement? 

Nine Questions You Should Ask

Response to Violent Incidents: Helping Keep Firefighters Out of Harm’s Way

John H. Oates,
Fire Chief, East Hartford, CT

They are mostly known by a single name: Columbine, Virginia Tech, 9-11, and now, Newtown and Webster. These significant events, shootings, violence of unfathomable magnitude can take years to overcome, if ever. Within each incident, among the sad, injured, and distraught is a common image: a fire engine. There would not be a fire engine if not for a firefighter.

As firefighters, we are called upon every day to provide assistance to a wide range of incidents. Occasionally, in our efforts to help others, we become the victims of violent events, resulting in injury or even death. From violent crimes in our neighborhoods to terrorist attacks on a grand scale, the risk to firefighters seems to be increasing. Recent events in Connecticut and western New York have renewed our focus on decreasing that risk.

Firefighter Life Safety Initiative 12 (FLSI 12) states that “National protocols for response to violent incidents should be developed and championed.” Following the 2004 and 2007 Firefighter Life Safety Summits, efforts were made to develop a national protocol for responding to violent incidents. Communities and groups have taken steps to specifically address the issue on local and national levels. Even with that effort, there remains an absence of response protocols for violent incidents in many fire departments.

Recognizing that progress had been limited, the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation convened a focus group on March 9-10, 2012 in Anne Arundel County, Maryland. Thirty-five participants representing 29 organizations attended. The participants were selected based upon their research and work in the area of response to violent incidents by emergency response personnel.

On the first day, the discussions reflected the general sense that violent acts against first responders are underreported. Anecdotal evidence abounds; hard data is lacking. One of the challenges at the core of this issue is defining a “violent act.” The discussions revealed a diversity of perspective and viewpoint. One person may consider being punched or kicked by a rowdy patient as a violent act. Another may think such incidents are just part of the job. Consequently events like these may be unreported.

But developing a definition and disseminating reports of our response to violent incidents is just the starting point. How to respond quickly and effectively to violent incidents is a considerable concern. Many violent incidents that firefighters respond to begin as a ‘typical’ call; an ‘unknown’ injured party, a response to extinguish an outside fire, even injuries from an assault are calls that fire departments respond to each and every day. Too many times these responses turn violent. The solution to protecting our firefighters, while serving the public, lies in the experience of those who have survived a violent event.

A significant portion of the focus group work was presentations by representatives from several fire departments who had responded to the outcome of a violent incident. These included the Columbine High School shootings, the tragic shooting of a Lexington, Kentucky fire department lieutenant and several civil disturbances including gunfire at a fire department headquarters. Participants heard about actions implemented in each jurisdiction following their incident. These outcomes and changes were dissected to understand how these, or similar, steps could be incorporated into national protocols.

After listening to each presentation and contemplating the circumstances surrounding each event, the group began developing a path forward. What started as nine recommendations in 2007 are now 14 recommendations and conclusions that are guidelines for the fire service to reduce the risk of serious injury or death in potentially violent situations. This set of recommendation is available here. Within those recommendation is a Preliminary Checklist When Confronted with a Violent Incident. It is hoped company chiefs, fire officers and firefighters will use this as a guide.

Despite our efforts it is apparent that many departments still do not have a policy for responding to violent incidents. The group proposed that all departments should have a policy in place for handling or responding to a violent situation. Several policy examples are available on the Everyone Goes Home® web page, www.everyonegoeshome.com. Departments should not delay creating and implementing a policy that is realistic for their jurisdiction.

The group made two final points. First, an After Action Review is critically important after every call, including response to violent incidents. Capturing information and sharing it throughout your organization sets the path for improvement. Second, but certainly no less important than the others, is a process to deal with the after effects. Responses to violent incidents, particularly those that injure or kill a member, create long lasting mental images. A behavioral health model that meets the latest NFPA 1500 requirements must be available to all department members.

As firefighters, we must be well prepared for any event, including life-threatening and violent situations. The recommendations outlined in the Firefighter Life Safety 12 Final Report – along with all the other FLSI Reports – are a must-read for everyone in the fire service.

The events of the previous few weeks should bring clarity and focus to this effort. Your community is not immune. No fire department is so well prepared that they cannot benefit from further work. Even a ‘typical’ call can deteriorate into a violent incident. Take the time to ensure your members, company, station, or department is better prepared tomorrow than they are today.

To read the full report, go to: www.lifesafetyinitiatives.com/12/FLSI12_FinalReport.pdf

UPDATED with extended audio – Emergency radio traffic from CT elementary school shooting. At least 26 dead, including 18 children.

24 comments

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

Above is a corrected clip from firefighterdispatch that includes the audio lost from the previous clip.

Below is the first two hours of audio from Radioman911TV.

AP:

A shooting at a Connecticut elementary school Friday left 27 people dead, including 18 children, an official said.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation was still under way. Another official, speaking on condition of anonymity for the same reason, said the gunman at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown was killed and apparently had two guns.

Stephen Delgiadice said his 8-year-old daughter heard two big bangs and teachers told her to get in a corner. His daughter was fine.

“It’s alarming, especially in Newtown, Connecticut, which we always thought was the safest place in America,” he said.

The superintendent’s office said the district had locked down schools in Newtown, about 60 miles northeast of New York City. Schools in neighboring towns also were locked down as a precaution.

A dispatcher at the Newtown Volunteer Ambulance Corps said a teacher had been shot in the foot and taken to Danbury Hospital. Andrea Rynn, a spokeswoman at the hospital, said it had three patients from the school but she did not have information on the extent or nature of their injuries.

State police said Newtown police called them around 9:40 a.m. A SWAT team was among the throngs of police to respond.

A photo posted by The Newtown Bee newspaper showed a group of young students — some crying, others looking visibly frightened — being escorted by adults through a parking lot in a line, hands on each other’s shoulders.

Mergim Bajraliu, 17, heard the gunshots echo from his home and raced to check on his 9-year-old sister at the school. He said his sister, who was fine, heard a scream come over the intercom at one point. He said teachers were shaking and crying as they came out of the building.

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

Raw video: Three mansions burn in Greenwich, CT during Sandy. Firefighters get residents out of harm’s way.

1 comment

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

Two videos from  of three large homes that burned on Binney Lane in Greenwich, Connecticut during Sandy.

Neil Vigdor, GreenwichTime.com:

Three Old Greenwich families are homeless after a “firestorm” quickly spread from house-to-house at the height of Hurricane Sandy, testing the resolve of shaken firefighters who were hailed Tuesday for their efforts to prevent the inferno from consuming the rest of the densely developed neighborhood.

A team of career and volunteer firefighters grappled with winds in excess of 80 mph and a treacherous storm surge Monday night that Fire Chief Peter Siecienski said forced them to stand down, but not before rescuing a dozen people from Binney Lane, a private drive off Shore Road.

Read more about the fire from residents and firefighters.

<

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

Early video & fireground audio: Abandoned house in Meriden, CT.

1 comment

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

Video from Matt Van Ness at  of a fire late Thursday night at Kensington Avenue and Summary Street.

Richie Rathsack, Record-Journal:

The cause of the fire that tore through a vacant house on Kensington Avenue late Thursday night is under criminal investigation, Fire Marshal Steve Trella said Friday.

It was the fourth major fire in a vacant building within roughly a one-mile radius since May, but fire officials say the latest blaze did not fit the same pattern as the other three. Vacant properties, however, continue to be a concern, officials said. 

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

Raw video: House fire in Meriden, CT.

2 comments

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

Compilation of video from a house fire in Meriden, Connecticut on Tuesday, July 10.

My Record Journal:

Shortly after 2 p.m., firefighters were called to 104 Lewis Ave. on a report of smoke coming from the building. Within minutes, the light smoke turned to thick black smoke as the fire tore through the building.

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

Early video: The start of a two day long factory fire in Bridgeport, CT.

11 comments

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

Above is more than 16 minutes of what appears to be video of the initial attack on last week’s fire at a block long factory building on Hancock Avenue at Railroad Avenue in Bridgeport, Connecticut. Firefighters ended up pumping water into the structure for more than two days. Later video and TV news coverage is below.

Connecticut Post:

For almost two days beginning Thursday night, firefighters shot steady  streams of water into the burning building.

“You’ve got to give these guys a lot of credit,” Fossesigurani said. “Not  only were they battling a stubborn blaze with heavy, acidic smoke, but they had  to deal with the hot temperatures we had outside and then the heavy rain that  followed. Our guys took a real beating.”

Firefighters were kept outside battling the blaze because of  structural collapses.

 WCBS-TV:

Firefighters remained at the Nest Arts Factory on Friday morning as smoke continued to billow. Officials expect the smoldering to continue through the weekend. 

Assistant Fire Chief Ismael Pomales said it appears an accelerant was used because of how big the fire was when firefighters arrived Thursday evening. He also says youths apparently hang around the building because of the graffiti there.

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

Truly a great moment in public safety: ‘My dumb-ass assistant chief took it upon himself to discontinue my permit’. Fire commissioner holds his breath until his lights turn blue again.

20 comments

Click here for the Blue Hills Fire Department website

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

Someone needs to get a dose of reality at the Blue Hills Fire Department in Bloomfield, Connecticut very quickly. That is an actual on the record quote given to the Hartford Courant’s Steven Goode by Fire Commissioner Jimmy Davis. Lovely, isn’t it?

Davis is a retired truck driver with a disability who has been a commissioner for the Blue Hills Fire District for 13 years. Because Davis is not an active firefighter, Assistant Fire Chief Roy Rickis, when he was acting chief in January, decided not to renew the state blue light permit for Davis’ POV. Reporter Goode describes the Ford Crown Victoria as being ”tricked out like a state police cruiser”.

So, rather than take this insult, Commissioner Davis showed Chief Rickis who is in charge. He took away the department issued SUV that Chief Rickis used to respond to fire scenes.

So, in other words, if the man who isn’t a firefighter can’t respond, let’s keep the active fire chief from responding too. That should help our mission of protecting the public, don’t you think?

Right up there with the “dumb-ass assistant chief” comment is Commissioner Davis telling the paper Rickis is lucky he only had the SUV taken from him and wasn’t fired.

For three months, the man who is supposed to be in charge on the fireground responds in his own personal vehicle without lights and siren.

Here’s more from reporter Goode:

“He messed with me,” Davis said. “Someday when I feel it’s right, I may give it back to him.”

“It’s not right,” Rickis said. “I got stuck in traffic. But I take it with a grain of salt.”

Davis has had flashing blue lights on his personal car for years, having had his permit renewed annually by fthen-Fire Chief Art Gold even though he’s not an active firefighter and his disability requires him to carry a folding walker in the back seat. He keeps a mobility scooter in the Blue Hills firehouse to help him get around there.

Make sure you read this entire article to understand just how stupid it all is

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

Raw video: Vacant multi-family home in Meriden, Connecticut.

No comments

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

This is video shot by Matt Van Ness of a fire on Tuesday at a vacant multi-family home on Windsor Avenue in Meriden, Connecticut. Matt was recently featured in an article about his videos of the Meriden Fire Department.

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

Raw video: Three family home burns in Enfield, Connecticut.

26 comments

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

A fire in a three family home yesterday morning on Park Avenue in Enfield, Connecticut. One firefighter suffered a minor hand injury.

According to the description with the video by drummer112093 at YouTube, the fire was handled by the Thompsonville FD with mutual aid from Enfield, North Thompsonville, Shaker Pines, and Hazardville.

WVIT-TV:

Arriving firefighters battled the elements as well as the flames.

“The wind was a huge factor that really hampered our operations,” said Thompsonville Fire Chief Frank Alaimo.

The home was a complete loss, so firefighters focused on saving the surrounding houses.

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

Just like one of those trick birthday candles. Stubborn Connecticut car fire.

10 comments

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

One of the stubborn ones. A car fire posted to YouTube yesterday from North Broad Street in Meriden, Connecticut.

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

Early video: Apartment fire in Derby, Connecticut.

27 comments

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

Read story of man involved in his second rescue attempt at a burning building in the last three years

Above is early video of a fire on Thursday at an apartment building on Olivia Street in Darby, Connecticut.

New Haven Register:

The fire early Thursday afternoon that heavily damaged a six-family apartment building at 92-94 Olivia St. was caused by a cigarette, Fire Marshal Phil Hawks said this morning.

He said the building is uninhabitable “right now, because we had to cut the power because of the water damage.”

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

Pre-arrival raw video, plus must hear citizen narration: Sawdust building explosions & fire in Enfield, Connecticut.

17 comments

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

On this page are a series of pre-arrival videos from a fire late Tuesday afternoon in a sawdust storage building at Carris Reels Company on Randolph Street in Enfield, Connecticut. Witnesses say there was an initial explosion and on the videos you will hear and see a number of other blasts.

From Rich Tanguay at Patch.com:

The explosion occurred in a building used to store sawdust around 5:15 p.m., said Bill Ferguson, production manager for Carris Reels.

The storage building was rebuilt in the 1970s, and stores trailers which are filled with sawdust via a pipe from the main plant, said Mark Zarcaro, public information officer for the Enfield fire departments.

MAKE SURE YOU LISTEN to the interesting narration from htfdfire.com on the video immediately below discussing the response time and actions of the responding departments. In his description posted with the video he congratulates "everyone for saving the concrete walls and flooring!!" and writes, "THIS is why there are PROFESSIONAL FIREFIGHTERS and PAID Departments!! ."

Below that are two higher quality pre-arrival videos, also showing the early firefighting operations.

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

Raw video: Fires in Gary and Lake Station, Indiana.

16 comments

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

Saturday was a busy day for Ed Malik. Above is a house fire at 2788 Warren in Lake Station, Indiana that came in around noon. Here is some of what Ed wrote:

Just a note, the siding on the rear of the house was melted by an intense garage fire a few months back set by a disgruntled girlfriend and the melted siding on the side of the house was caused when the homeowner set a couch on fire about a year ago.

Around 3:00 PM, Ed shot the fire below at 15th and Connecticut in Gary, Indiana:

On arrival Battalion 4 advised of heavy smoke showing from a 2 story apartment building. Crews made an aggressive interior attack and brought the fire under control quickly.

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

Raw video: Small explosions at commercial building fire in Southington, Connecticut.

1 comment

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

The video above captures two blasts from inside a building at 200 Clark Street in Southington, Connecticut that burned this afternoon. There were no injuries. The building housed a local truck club.

From an article by Kimberly Primicerio at the Record-Journal:

A Southington Fire Department responded to a fire at 200 Clark St. around 12 p.m. where they were met with heavy flames, said Fire Chief Harold "Buddy" Clark.

2,000 gallons of diesel fuel was delivered to the address this morning, but Clark said the fuel was not touched in the fire.

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

Pre-arrival video: Initial attack on apartment fire in Newington, Connecticut.

56 comments

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

From WTNH-TV:

At least six families have been displaced after a fire broke out in Newington on Saturday.

The fire took place on Woodsedge Drive.

Newington Fire officials say the fire started in the kitchen of a first floor unit and spread quickly due to the building's construction.

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