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Helmet-cam: House fire in Wallkill, NY.

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Helmet-cam video from Jimmy Hopp of Plattekill Fire Rescue in Orange County, New York from a house fire on Tuesday at 50 Prospect Hill Road in Wallkill.

RecordOnline.com:

According to Platttekill Fire Chief Chris Mancuso, the fire was discovered when City of Newburgh Fire Chief Mike Vatter, who lives nearby, noticed smoke on his property  and went to investigate. Departments quickly responded, and the blaze, which started in half of the house, was put out quickly.

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In Harrisburg, PA this weekend for Fire Expo? Come see the people who make STATter911.com possible.

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At Booth E 204 you can get both a book that says less than flattering things about Dave Statter and an autograph by a Playboy Playmate. Life doesn’t get much better than that. Do stop by and talk fire trucks with Glenn, “DC Fire” with Dennis and whatever your heart desires with Stephanie.

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I’m in Harrisburg, PA looking to spend much of today walking around Fire Expo. Three places I know I will be stopping by for a while are the booths of our main site sponsors, Command Fire Apparatus, MN8-Foxfire and Fire Cam. These are the folks who make STATter911.com possible. Please thank them for that and check out what they have to offer.

Glenn Usdin’s Command Fire Apparatus is in the main hall (E) in Booth 204. Glenn is Pennsylvania’s largest used fire apparatus dealer. In addition, Glenn has two special guests. You will have your choice of Dennis Rubin signing his book “DC Fire” or Playboy Playmate Stephanie Larimore signing the 2014 Command Fire Apparatus calendar. Hmmm. Tough choice. Which will it be?

If it will help you make your decision (if you can only have one), I should tell you I am not in the calendar (I can hear the sighs of relief), but I did make the book (though not by name). If she has one, I think I would much rather be mentioned in Stephanie’s book, because you won’t find that The Rube had anything good to say about me. But that’s okay. My ego is such I don’t mind selling a book that blasts me. For the past few weeks I’ve been meaning to provide a bit of an online companion to “DC Fire”. But setting the record straight about my role in chronicling the Rubin administration just hasn’t been a priority. I will get to it though and promise to make it compelling and truthful or double your money back. I will even throw in a free subscription to FireCritic.com. Seriously, get by Booth E 204.

MN8-Foxfire is at Booth NE 637 A,B. Let Zach Green’s illuminating products light up your life. Captain Willie Wines Jr. of IronFiremen.com fame, who usually does say nice things about me, will also be there. At every convention the MN8-Foxfire booth is hopping and it will Saturday and Sunday.

Rob Schield’s Fire Cam is at EH 2024. Rob’s fire and police helmet and dash cameras are top notch. Besides the great picture quality, they are extremely durable. I’ve put them to use on video shoots and have been very happy with the results.

Please support our sponsors. Hope to see you.

Check this out – Helmet-cam video & fireground audio: Three-alarm apartment fire in Colorado Springs, CO.

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IronsandLadders.com

Video and audio from IronsandLadders.com of a three-alarm apartment fire around 7:30 PM on May 5, 2012 at 2830 Airport Road in Colorado Springs, Colorado. This is the view from a helmet-cam carried by a firefighter from Truck 8 of the Colorado Springs Fire Department. Make sure you check out the wesbite’s very detailed account of this fire. Here is an abbreviated account excerpted from the video’s description at IRONSandLADDERS on YouTube:

This footage has been made into a training video and shows some good examples of VES and points out areas where we could have improved our VES techniques. We know it is not perfect, but thought it offered a good first hand view of Vent Enter Search being performed by a first in Truck Co with poor conditions in some of the units. It serves as an example of a building fire where people may want to assume that civilians could not survive from the front side, but shows how many survivable spaces were found on the backside of the structure. The fire involved 6 units along with heavy fire involvement in the attic. It also started the siding and the soffit of the neighboring building on fire.  The fire was contained to the original 6 units that were involved upon arrival . The building had 16 units total.

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Helmet-cam video: House burns twice, a year apart, in East. St. Louis, IL.

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Two fires in the same house in East St. Louis, IL. The fires were about a year apart. The first fire features two probies. The video is from bobbybushae, our sponsor FireVideo.net’s YouTube channel. We have a video player in the right hand column of this site featuring these videos. Below is the description with the video:

This is a 2 part video. The 1st part is of an occupied 1 story house fire with smoke showing / fire venting from rear bedroom. We had 2 probationary firefighters with us that day and WOW was that fun. Pass devices going off and getting blasted in the face with an open nozzle was fun. But we ALL have to learn at the beginning! The probies made a quick stop and all was good. Until 1 year later the same house came in and it was going a little better this time, especially thru the attic. We were going to make the same push thru the front but the heat conditions were deteriorating by the second and being it was a vacant house now with fire thru the roof in some spots, we knocked it down from the outside and then went in. No one was injured but this was our 4th structure fire within our 24 hr shift….we were beat. The cameras used were the Fire Cam MINI HD and the Fire Cam 1080 Fire Helmet Cameras from www.firevideo.net


Helmet-cam video: House fire in Omaha, NE.

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Helmet-cam video from Dustin Talacko of a vacant house fire early Sunday evening at 4534 Jaynes Street in Omaha, Nebraska. More here.

 

Helmet-cam & still pictures: More from Highland Park, MI.

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More Highland Park, Michigan helmet-cam video from HPZ1442 and still pictures from our friend Steve Redick. Here’s the description:

This video is from Firefighter Tikkanen’s helmet camera. He was responding on Engine 2, the 2nd due engine for this fire. Crews responded to a report of an occupied dwelling fire on Connecticut street. They arrived to find heavy smoke showing. Upon 1st due crews entry they found heavy fire conditions on 1 and 2nd floor. The crew was able to extinguish the fire before it made its way into the attic. Not much fire footage on this video since the camera man was going in on the second line. You can see the heavy smoke in the beginning of it. I edited out most of his footage since it was just darkness. The guys described this one as an ass kicker, 3 bottle each fire. I was not personally on this fire. Photos at the end are compliments of Steve Redick and can be viewed or purchased on his web site http://ksc711.smugmug.com/. The camera used is a Firecam 1080. You can check them out at firevideo.net

 

Helmet-cam: Rescue from Highland Park, MI apartment above burning liquor store.

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From Highland Park, Michigan Firefighter Scott Ziegler (HPZ1442) during a fire last Thursday. Here is what Scott wrote about the video:

We responded to a report of flames showing from the side and front windows of a liquor store on the 1st floor of a 4 story apt building. We arrived to find smoke and flames showing, and that the Police Dept had already evacuated the occupants of the building. The liquor store was sealed up pretty tight and it took us a few extra minutes to get into it. While we worked on that, PD informed us that they may have heard screams on the 2nd floor while they cleared the building but that it was to smokey to go check. # of us responded to the main entrance and to the second floor where we found smokey conditions and limited visibility. PD and one of our off duty FF’s informed of the apt number the woman was believed to live in. The manager had said she was unaccounted for. We masked up and advanced in to find her. She was found in her unit, and carried out by Firefighter Eason. We were then informed of another possible victim. We went back in to search for him but while searching his apt we were informed that he had already made it out. My camera died at this point because I cannot seem to remember to charge it! At this time fire had extended into the 2nd and 3rd floors. We advanced hose lines through the windows from units adjacent to those that were on fire. The fire was brought under control in a little more than an hour. We operated on scene for several more cleaning up hot spots. We contained the fire to damaging only the liquor store where it had originated, and 4 apt units. Used a firecam 1080 from firevideo.net any sound you hear cut out is not from the camera, I actually edit some of the content out of it.

 

Helmet-cam: Moss Bluff, LA house fire.

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Video from Todd Parker of a house fire on Sunday in Moss Bluff, Louisiana. The description says this is Ward 6 FD responding mutual aid to Ward 1 FD.

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You’ll love this: Fresno Truck 4 gives police chase play-by-play during major fire. Also, collapse at strip mall caught on video.

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More coverage from Firegeezer.com

It’s always something. A police pursuit early this morning in Fresno, California headed straiht for where Fresno firefighters were dealing with a major fire in a strip mall. Command was alerted and received reports from its eye in the sky, a firefighter at the top of Truck 4 (or, if you prefer, the “truck mounted sprayer”, as an article below calls it).

As you will see in the video above, the pursuit came close, but skirted the area around the fire on all four sides of the shopping center.

There is more exciting video from the fire itself. A structural collapse was caught on at least three different cameras. You will see that in the various TV coverage below.

Amanda Venegas, KSFN-TV:

Fresno Firefighters arrived at the Mayfair Shopping Center within minutes of smoke being reported by a passerby. The Train Depot, Super Suds Laundry, Jesse’s Seafood Market and Thai Phooket were destroyed by the fire.

Officials said the type of roofing on the building made the flames spread quickly through the entire structure. It’s estimated to be a total loss.

Early Tuesday morning, employees of The Train Depot restaurant came out to see the aftermath of the fire. The owner and employees say they were devastated to see the restaurant burn to the ground. The business has been there for more than three decades. The owner said she plans to reopen.

KPGE-TV:

The fire was already coming through the roof when firefighters arrived and spread very quickly.
 
Kris Townsend with the Fresno Fire Department said crews had to pull back and allow truck-mounted sprayers to knock down the flames for safety reasons..

Early this morning flames consumed the Train Depot, Super Suds Laundry, Jesse’s Seafood Market and a Thai restaurant. Fire crews believe the blaze began in the attic and spread quickly.

Fire crews think faulty wiring may be to blame. However, the investigation is ongoing. In the meantime, crews will remain on scene putting out any hot spots. Fire crews say all four businesses are a complete loss. Damage will cost about $1.7 million.

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Must see helmet-cam video: Rescues at apartment fire in Seaside, CA.

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This is helmet-cam video from Justin Hastings of a fire reported just before 11:00 AM on April 10 at 1442 Yosemite Street in Seaside, California (Monterey County). A little girl was rescued by a neighbor (seen in the video in the arms of a police officer) and her mother was rescued through a window by the first arriving firefighters. Both were taken by helicopter to a hospital in San Jose. Three others were hurt in the fire.

Dennis Taylor, The Herald of Monterey County:

Seaside Deputy Police Chief Louis Lumpkin said two other people were taken to Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula for treatment of burns, and a fifth victim refused treatment at the scene. The fire broke out about 10:50 a.m. at the Del Monte Manor apartments.

Neighbor Alexis Hunter, who called herself a family friend, said she entered the burning apartment and found the child, whom she identified as 3-year-old Kaijah Collins, lying in a hallway just inside the front door. She scooped up the child in her arms and left the building.

The child’s mother, whom Hunter identified as 35-year-old Michelle Collins, was trapped in a second-floor bedroom, calling for help but refusing to exit through the upstairs window because she didn’t know where her daughter was, witnesses said.

Firefighters helped the woman out of the window and brought her down a ladder to safety.

KION-TV:

“I saw the Mom just banging on the window and so I ran over there,” said Alexis Hunter, who lives in the complex.

Hunter said what came next was a burst of adrenaline.

“I touched the door knob to see is if it was hot,” said Hunter.

She looked inside and saw three-year-old Keasha laying on the ground, by  now a maintenance man made his way up to the apartment and together they burst inside and pulled little Keasha out.

“I took her down the  stairs and I kept talking to her, because I know the little girl since  she was a baby, I was like Keasha, pay attention look at me, she was  breathing,” said Hunter.

But Keasha was badly burned, and Keasha’s Mom was still inside. Hunter said people tried getting her out but the smoke was too thick, so  they went around got a ladder and tried getting her out from the back  window. That’s when first responders arrived and helped pull Keasha’s Mom out.

Helmet-cam: House fire in Windber, PA with evacuation ordered due to water supply issues.

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Video from KPaul77 aboard Truck 3-1 from the Richland Fire Department at a house fire on Tuesday afternoon at 105 11th Street in Windber, Pennsylvania (Somerset County). Here’s the description with the video: 

Truck 3-1 officer Sgt. Kyle Paul. 2nd due truck and 3rd arriving unit. Truck crew was originally assigned to open up and search for stairs leading to division 2. Due to lack of water supply crews were evacuated out until a water source was established. Truck crew entered a second time and vented division 2.

Melanie Gillespie, WJAC-TV:

“The fire was already ahead of us, which made it very hot inside; which made it more difficult for crews. So, we had to have a lot of back lines to back the other guys up,” Windber Fire Chief Aaron Cicon said.

Two firefighters were sent to the hospital for heat exhaustion and dehydration as a result of being on the roof.

“Everybody’s not used to the heat again. People went down pretty fast. It took two alarms to get enough guys here to cover, and because of where we’re at here, people aren’t too close so we had to pull from pretty far distances,” Cicon said.

The chief called the fire fast-moving and told 6News it started in the kitchen.

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Helmet-cam video: Two-alarm rowhouse fire in Reading, PA.

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More on this video from FireCritic.com

Video from Erik Hirner giving the tillerman’s view of a two-alarm fire last Wednesday afternoon in rowhomes in the 300 block of North 13th Street in Reading, Pennsylvania.  Here’s some of what our friends at ReadingPaFire.com reported about the fire:

Companies were dispatched for a reported kitchen fire at the address noted.  Car 7 (Kemery) arrived on scene with heavy smoke showing and confirmed a working fire in the 2 1/2 story middle-of-the-row dwelling.  Car 3 (Mogel) established command with heavy fire to the rear of the home, which was rapidly extending to the exposed homes in the row due to the sustained winds of 20 miles per hour, which were gusting to 30 miles per hour. Car 3 then requested the 2nd alarm.   Several 1.75″ handlines were stretched from Engine 1 and Engine 3 into both the original fire building and the exposures.  A 2.5″ handline from Engine 9 in the rear was utilized to knock-down a large portion of the exterior fire consuming the rear porches, fencing, and other combustibles in the rear yards.  Extensive roof work was necessary to check the spread of the flames via the interior voids and attic spaces of the homes.  Fire extended into 339, 341, 345 North 13th Street.  Searches proved negative; however, one civilian was injured.  Oncoming B Platoon firefighters relieved the D Platoon on the scene. 

Erik Hirner reports the video was shot with a Fire Cam 1080 from FireVideo.net (which just happens to be our newest sponsor at STATter911.com).

Controversy in Dallas, TX over helmet-cam video. Press wants to talk with firefighter. Chief not happy.

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Dallas News | myFOXdfw.com

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See video causing controversy (still online as of 8:30 AM EDT)

Last week we posted a helmet-cam video from a Dallas, Texas firefighter showing the initial attack at a house fire. Now it is the video that is apparently under attack. According to news reports, the fire chief isn’t happy it was shot or posted to YouTube and it is making news.

James Rose, KDFW-TV:

Administration sources told FOX 4 the Chief is angry about the video being  taken and posted. The source stopped short of calling it an official  “investigation,” but did say it is being looked into.

It’s unclear if Dallas Fire Rescue has a policy regarding helmet cam video.  It’s also unclear who the camera belongs to and who, if anyone, sanctioned the  video’s posting.

Selwyn Crawford, DallasNews.com:

A few hundred views have become several thousand, and it’s become quite the sensation — so much so that officials with Dallas Fire-Rescue announced Friday night that the firefighter who shot the video with his helmet camera would not be made available for interviews, despite a legion of reporters who gathered outside Fire Station No. 5 on St. Augustine Road.

In a note sent to media moments ago, DFR spokesman Jason Evans writes “that several media outlets are camped out across the street” from the fire station, but that “we are not granting any interview requests in regards to the video recently posted on line by one of our firefighters.” 

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Helmet-cam: Roof ops at rowhouse fire in Harrisburg, PA.

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Video by byronworner1748 of a fire this morning in Harrisburg, PA.

Jeffrey Johnson, PennLive.com:

The American Red Cross is assisting nine people who were displaced by a fire earlier today in the 400 block of Muench Street in Harrisburg.

There were seven adults and two children in two separate homes that were displaced, according to Kathy Bink, a media relations specialist with the Red Cross. None were injured in the fire.

Helmet-cam: Dallas, Texas house fire.

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Video from BigD3243 of a house fire in Dallas, Texas. Thanks to John Burgdorf at DFW Scanner. Description with the video:

Dallas fire station 5 “The Dirty Nickel” responds to a Box Alarm in pleasant grove. You can hear the size up in the video. First time to use Fire cam 1080.

 

Helmet-cam: Fairfield, CA motel fire.

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A motel fire in Fairfield, California on August 16, 2012. Video from Fairfield Fire.

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Helmet-cam: House fire in Ballston Spa, NY. Fire chief says wind was a factor.

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Video from gopro518 of a fire Sunday afternoon on Milton Avenue in Ballston Spa, New York (Saratoga County).

YNN:

Fire officials said the fire sparked in the attic, but the cause is still unknown. They said while the first and second floors of the apartment had some water damage, the attic and roof of the home were destroyed.

“Unfortunately, with the wind blowing, it was blowing the fire on the windows on all four corners of the attic. So, once the window broke it was blowing the fire around in the attic. Once we were able to get in the attic we were able to put it out,” said Kevin Theriault, Ballston Spa Fire Chief.


A fire department that has nothing but firefighters with a lot of heart, may soon have a lot less. Watch this video from East St. Louis, Illinois.

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East St. Louis, Illinois is one of those fire departments that is extremely underfunded and understaffed. Like Highland Park, Michigan and some other departments we have featured, it responds and handles structure fires with a very small number of overworked and poorly equipped firefighters. As bad as it is, Rob Schield tells us it’s about to get a lot worse. Click here to watch this nicely produced video showing what Rob and his fellow firefighters face on the fireground and throughout the the city. Here’s some of what Rob wrote about the video:

With over 150 firefighters that used to protect this city, only 53 remain due to budget cuts. Unfortunately the East St. Louis fire department is facing laying off 22 more firefighters in May 2013 which is extremely dangerous.

Most fire departments respond up to 5 engines, 2 Chiefs and 15 firefighters to a house fire. Right now only 2 engines and 6 firefighters respond to a structure or house fire in East St. Louis EVERYDAY which is well below the number required by the NFPA. This is not to mention the other fire calls that come in. If layoffs occur, that number could fall to 3 firefighters and 1 engine which will be catastrophic.

 

Helmet-cam video: First in company at three-alarm Fresno, CA apartment fire.

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FresnoFireDepartment video from a three-alarm fire yesterday morning.

KFSN-TV:

Fire displaced 31 residents of a condominium complex in East Central Fresno. 18 units of Peachwood Village at Olive and Peach were evacuated because of the blaze.

Flames were shooting through the roof when firefighters arrived just before 9:00 Monday morning.

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Helmet-cam video: Attic fire in Jacksonville, FL.

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Video from High Def Helmet (FDCam.com) of a house fire that appears to have taken place in Jacksonville, Florida.

Here’s more from the description:

Just after midnight Firefighters were called to a late night house fire. Initial crews were met with heat & flames pushing through the roof. As the first arriving Eng. Co. made the stretch, Ladder crews made a primary search & began exposing the fire by pulling ceiling. The video picks up with 2nd arriving Ladder Co. assisting command and reporting to the rear of the structure.

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Helmet-cam video: Expect fire. Even on an ambulance call in North Chicago, IL.

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Video from Joe K. of a house fire on Kristan Avenue in North Chicago, IL. No date given. Here’s the description:

Ambulance 46 responded to the home for a “trouble breathing” or a “person not breathing” (dispatch couldn’t understand with the screams), arrived on scene of working structure fire with initial reports of the two parents still inside( they self escaped prior to our entry). Fire confined to the second floor of the split level. Minor heat damage to garage in rear.


Helmet-cam: Roof ops at Fairless Hills, PA house fire.

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Another video from prolitepete of Levittown Fire Company #2 in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. This was taken at a house fire Tuesday night in Fairless Hills.

Tom Sofield, Levittown Patch:

A contractor working on tile inside a home in the 200 block of Doone Road in the Fairless Hills section of Falls Township was alerted to a fire by a knocking sound Tuesday night, officials said.

The sound, which may have saved the contractor’s life, was made by a fast-moving fire that started outside the house and quickly spread into the attic, Fire Marshal Rich Dippolito said.

The fire marshal said he is still investigating what caused the fire. However, it was determined the fire emanated from a pile of construction debris outside.

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Helmet-cam: House fire in Kansas City, MO.

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Video from robbie Dill of a house fire in Kansas City, Missouri. No further information.

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Helmet-cam video: House fire in Levittown, PA.

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Video from prolitepete of a house fire in the Levittown, Pennsylvania area (Bucks County). No further information.

Helmet-cam video: Three homes burn in Highland Park, Michigan. One person dead.

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This is the latest video from Highland Park, Michigan Firefighter Scott Ziegler (HPZ1442). It is from around 10:30 Thursday morning. The fire took the life of a man whose body was found in the middle of the three homes that burned. Here is news coverage of the fire and below is Scott’s account with the video:

Called to report of a fire in an occupied dwelling around 9am. We arrived with a crew of 6, to find one house fully involved with the houses on both sides involved as well. As you can see here We dumped our monitor on the middle home while I stretched our bundles for each exposure home. With only one good hydrant in the area being right in front of the scene, our OIC decided to pump off our ladder so that we could use elevated stream for the middle home(which was to far gone to sustain life or make entry) and make an interior attack with hand lines on both exposures. While setting up tower operations our truck would not go into pump and it took several minutes to fix that problem. You will see me make a quick check on the 1st floor of the left side home for any occupants, was radioed outside as all occupants were accounted for. I then went to an exposure line which as you can see has no pressure at first. Knocked down some fire from the outside before making entry with firefighter Tikkanen into the right side exposure home. At this same time 2 other firefighters are making an interior attack on the home to the left, while tower operations are taking care of the middle home. We made entry through the window since the door was barred and locked together with several large chains. That door was eventually opened by one of the guys working exterior. We had heavy fire in the 2nd floor with part of the roof burned off the back side of the house, and heavy fire coming from the house next door. We knocked down most of the 2nd floor while attempting to hold off fire coming from the center home. Once both our low air alarms started to go off, our chief made entry to tell us we had fire in the basement which we assume came from the house next door when the outer walls fell down. My camera must not have had a full charge because I did not get anymore footage after changing my first bottle. Him and another firefighter made a push on the basement while we changed our bottles. Both firefighters from the left side home have finished up putting out that fire and have joined us in the right side home where we still have fire in the void spaces and attic. An attic ladder was brought in to knock down what was left up there, and we got reports from OIC that the basement had took off again. Myself and my Sgt went back to the basement where we found extreme heat and heavy fire towards that back side of the house. Unable to make progress pushing through the basement heat we went upstairs and put it out through a basement window. The 4 of us fighting this fire went through 4 and a half bottles each. We worked at this scene until 730pm mopping up hot spots. It was a long day Unfortunately shortly after our arrival we were told there was possibly a man in the center home who had not gotten out. We fully feel that the outcome of this fire could not have been different based on the conditions when we arrived. The center home was fully involved and through the roof. We did in fact find the body of a man, which you can read about on myfoxdetroit. We are very upset at the loss of one of our citizens and our thoughts and prayers go out to the family. This video was edited down from about 40 minutes of footage. I only take out some sound (language or sensitive material) and anything that you cannot hear or see for long periods of time. I used a FireCam 1080 to film this video. I did my best to explain this fire in order to maybe cut back on the Key board firefighters making their usual comments. I may have forgotten to mention some things. If you dont like the way we did or do something…dont do it were you work.

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