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Must see video: Firefighter grabbed as he falls through roof during Charlotte, NC house fire.

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Thanks to David Bradshaw (@BOXEMOUTDAVE) for alerting STATter911.com to this video from a house fire on Thursday in Charlotte, NC.

WCNC-TV:

When crews arrived on the scene, heavy smoke and fire poured from the home that sits a block off the intersection of Eastway Drive and Independence Boulevard.

While working to contain the blaze, a fireman fell into the roof, but was quickly pulled to safety by his colleagues.

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Dash-cam video: House fire in Durham, NC.

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Durham FD’s Squad 1 (C Shift) took this video of a house fire on Thursday.

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Helmet-cam: House fire in Durham, NC with ceiling collapse.

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No details with this fire posted Sunday from Durham, North Carolina. At about 6:00 into the video the firefighters decide to back out a bit because of a collapsing ceiling.

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Former firefighter hailed as hero, does TV interview, then arrested hours later charged with arson. Jacob Rumley was maintenance man at Madison, NC apartment complex.

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The video above includes one of the interviews Jacob Rumley did after the fire and before his arrest. 

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WGHP-TV:

The former Madison firefighter credited with alarming residents of an early morning apartment fire has been arrested and is suspected of starting the blaze.

Jacob Rumley was arrested on Tuesday night and was charged with one count of first degree arson, said Madison Police Chief Perry Webster.

Rumley is accused of starting a fire at Lassiter Square Apartments around 10 a.m. Tuesday at 308 Decatur St.

Chief Webster said it’s a shame a man claiming to have been a firefighter would put firefighters at risk on September 11, a day spent honoring first responders.

Sarah Newell Williamson, News-Record.com:

Rumley had said earlier that he went to the building to do a work order when the tenant smelled smoke. Rumley, who said he is a former volunteer firefighter, said he knocked on the door of every apartment on the second floor, telling people to get out.

Rumley went through the first floor, making certain that every person and every pet was out of the apartments, he said. If there was no answer at the door, he went inside.

“I have a master key,” Rumley said. “If I knocked on the door and no one comes, I’m going to open the door. I may get in trouble, but it’s better than the alternative.” 

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Final report: Ashevlle FD investigation into the death of Captain Jeff Bowen.

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Click here to download entire report

Our friends at FireNews.net have alerted us to the release of the City of Asheville (NC) Fire Department’s line of duty death report looking at the July 28, 2011 fire at 445 Biltmore Avenue that took the life of Captain Jeffrey Scott Bowen.

Chief Scott Burnette talked about some of the changes for the department outlined in the report.

Julie Ball, Citizens-Times.com:

Chief Scott Burnette reviewed some of the changes the department has planned during a presentation for City Council’s Public Safety Committee on Monday.

The chief also released the department’s 522-page internal report on the Biltmore Avenue fire that killed Capt. Jeff Bowen in July of last year.

“It is our hope that the lessons learned from the fire at 445 Biltmore Ave. will create positive improvements in the fire service as a whole,” Burnette said in a letter included with the report.

Emily Pace, WSPA-TV:

“We have sent every one of our firefighters through a rapid intervention team certification course,” said Burnette.

The new course is required by the state of North Carolina and teaches crews how to rescue a firefighter in trouble.

Burnette hopes it will help prevent another tragic loss.  

“We have also added an extra fire engine to structure fire responses, so that way we can make sure we have enough personnel to serve as a rescue team,” adds Burnette. 

Other links:

Read NIOSH report

The loss of Captain Jeff Bowen, the inside story from Firefighter Jay Bettencourt Part 1

The loss of Captain Jeff Bowen, the inside story from Firefighter Jay Bettencourt Part 2

Earlier coverage of this fire here, here & here

Firefighter Jay Bettencourt receives firefighter of the year

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NIOSH reports: LODDs of Asheville, NC’s Capt. Jeff Bowen & Baltimore Co., MD’s FF Mark Falkenhan.

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NIOSH released reports into the line of duty deaths of two firefighters whose deaths we  covered. Below are the reports and some related links. Both men’s names will be added to the National Fallen Firefighters Memorial during Memorial Weekend, October 6 & 7.

January 19, 2011, Baltimore County, MD, Firefighter Mark Falkenhan:

Read NIOSH report

ATF modeling of fire

ATF report

Baltimore County report

Radio traffic

 July 28, 2011, Asheville, NC, Captain Jeff Bowen:

Read NIOSH report

The loss of Captain Jeff Bowen, the inside story from Firefighter Jay Bettencourt Part 1

The loss of Captain Jeff Bowen, the inside story from Firefighter Jay Bettencourt Part 2

Earlier coverage of this fire here, here & here

Firefighter Jay Bettencourt receives firefighter of the year 

Check this out: Carolina Brotherhood Ride 2012 begins Monday honoring Asheville FD Captain Jeff Bowen.

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Learn more about Carolina Brotherhood Ride 2012

A week from tomorrow is the first anniversary of the death of Asheville Fire Department Captain Jeffrey Bowen. The first annual Carolina Brotherhood Ride, a 5-day cycling event  made up of firefighters and police officers from the Carolinas begins Monday in Wilmington and is dedicated to the memory of Captain Bowen. Click here to learn more about the event.

The Loss of Captain Bowen, Part 1 & Part 2

Two former NC fire chiefs found not guilty in case of junior firefighter shocked with stun gun. Incident happened at an East Spencer FD Christmas party.

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Allen Carlyle on the left and Shane Cranfield on the right.

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Previous STATter911.com coverage of this story here & here

Salisbury Post:

Two former East Spencer firefighters and a former police officer were found not guilty this week during a non-jury trial five months after a junior firefighter was shocked with a stun gun.

The incident was said to have occurred at a department Christmas party. The two firefighters — former Chief Shane Cranfield and former Assistant Chief Allen Carlyle — were accused of using a stun gun on junior firefighter John Resino, 18.

According to arrest warrants, the stun gun came from former East Spencer Police Officer James Lambeth.

WBTV-TV:

“I want to say thank you to all my true friends who stood behind me,” Shane Cranfield told WBTV Tuesday afternoon.  When asked if had been confident about the outcome, Cranfield said “I had my doubts, I knew I didn’t do it, but I still.”

Cranfield said he believed inconsistencies in Resino’s story led to the not guilty verdict.  Even though he was found not guilty, Cranfield said the accusations have taken their toll.

“I have lost my position as the Chief of the East Spencer fire department, as well as my part time paid position. My reputation, career, and life have been ran threw the mud and destroyed.  I have been blacked balled throughout the county and shunned by people I have known for years and considered to be my brothers. Along with me, two other people, firefighter Alan Carlyle and officer James Lambeth, have also faced the same ridicule and public embarrassment as myself.”

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North Carolina Board of Transportation reverses itself. Asheville bridge now expected to be named for Capt. Jeff Bowen.

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The Loss of Captain Bowen by Firefighter Jay Bettencourt, Part 1 & Part 2

Previous coverage of this story herehere, here & here

Congratulations to the Asheville Firefighters Association, the North Carolina State Firemen’s Association and the 7700 people who supported the petition drive to change the minds of the North Carolina Board of Transportation about renaming the Smoky Park Bridge after Captain Jeff Bowen who died during a medical office building fire last July. A committee voted unanimously yesterday to move forward with the new name and the full board is expected to vote this morning.

The same group is also going to reconsider the long-standing practice that generally excluded firefighters, but allowed state bridges to be named after fallen law officers. The committees chairman says they are supporting the will of the people.

Here’s an excerpt from an article by Mark Barrett in the Asheville Citizen-Times:

The Naming Committee turned the idea down March 7, citing a practice by which DOT typically does not name roads or bridges for firefighters or other emergency workers who die in the line of duty, asking instead that local governments rename one of their structures.

DOT does regularly name bridges after state troopers killed on the job and other law enforcement officers have been so honored.

A Citizen-Times review of state records found that the names of two firefighters who did not die on the job adorn bridges in Western North Carolina and that elected officials make up the largest single category of honorees.

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Raw video of controlled burn: Evacuation ordered at Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina.

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NOTE: My apologies to all. This was not a lame attempt at an April Fools joke. I too noted some unusual things at this fire including the fire venting at three distinct locations on the roof and there was no news coverage. But I was also trying to figure out why the person with the camera was suddenly getting their gear. With no answers, I had not intended this to run until I figured it out. I didn’t realize I scheduled it and that it was up and running until I was at dinner with my family and saw the comments. This is, in fact, a controlled burn. Here are details from one of our readers:

This was a training burn on March 17, 2012 with firefighters from KDH, Lower Currituck, and Colington assisted by Dare County EMS.  The house was donated by the owner and had been used for non-live-fire training for several weeks before this.  It was on the sound front (Bay Drive in Kill Devil Hills) and was heavily damaged during Hurricane Irene.  This was approximately the sixth or seventh evolution of the day (give or take).  It was known that if the fire got into the attic, it would spread fast and crews would be pulled.  That’s what happened during this final evolution.  The 1-3/4-inch line wasn’t doing anything to darken the fire, so when it started venting heavily from the attic, the decision was made to pull interior crews, and the house was “let go.”  Kill Devil Hills is a combination department on the northern Outer Banks of North Carolina with three engines, one tower ladder, and a support/rehab unit.

EARLIER:

A house fire along North Carolina’s Outer Banks in Kill Devil Hills. No further information.

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Told no because he’s not a cop Asheville firefighters push ahead to have bridge named after fire Captain Jeff Bowen. Online petition growing.

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The Loss of Captain Bowen by Firefighter Jay Bettencourt, Part 1 & Part 2

Previous coverage of this fire here, here & here

Online petition to rename Smoky Park Bridge for Capt. Jeff Bowen

The Asheville Fire Fighters Association in North Carolina is leading the way to change state policy on naming bridges after being turned down about naming one after Capt. Jeff Bowen. Capt. Bowen died last July during a fire in a medical office building. An online petition to rename the Smoky Park Bridge was started on Sunday and more than 6500 names are on it.

Here’s the latest from Mark Barrett at Citizen-Times.com:

Board of Transportation policy has been to name bridges or roads after law enforcement officers who die in the line of duty or after people from all walks of life deemed to have made a significant contribution to the state.

The board has generally not extended the honor to firefighters for fear that it would have too many requests to deal with.

“I think it’s a pretty weak reason, and I think it shows disrespect for firefighters,” said Mike Marshall, president of the association.

State Insurance Commissioner Wayne Goodwin, who is also state fire marshal, also weighed in on the issue Friday, expressing his “disappointment and dismay” about the decision in a letter to the chair of the Board of Transportation committee in charge of naming questions.

“I strongly believe that firefighters are deserving of our highest respect, as they are among our public servants who intentionally put themselves in harm’s way for the sake of others,” wrote Goodwin, who first raised the idea of naming a road or bridge for Bowen last year.

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A must read from STATter911.com: Part 2 of The Loss of Captain Jeff Bowen. The inside story from Firefighter Jay Bettencourt, Asheville Fire Department.

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Captain Jeff Bowen, Asheville Fire Department.

CaptainJeffBowen.com

The Loss of Captain Bowen, Part 1

Previous coverage of this fire here, here & here

For the second morning in a row we are turning STATter911.com over to Firefighter Jay Bettencourt of North Carolina's Asheville Fire Department. This is Part 2 of Jay's account of the fire on July 28, 2011 at a medical office building at 445 Biltmore Avenue that took the life of his friend, mentor and captain, Jeff Bowen. Jay was seriously injured in the fire.

As we told you yesterday, Jay Betterncourt's motive in sharing this story is two fold. He wants to help others learn from this tragic event. In addition, Jay is trying to bring attention to the website CaptainJeffBowen.com. On the website you can purchase a t-shirt and/or make a donation, with 100 percent of the proceeds going to Captain Bowen's family. Please give your support.

Jay has reminded us that he is extremely grateful for the support he's received from the citizens of Asheville, his fellow firefighters and the leadership provided by Chief Scott Burnette.

I will remind you that the article below, The Loss of Captain Bowen, Part 2, consists of Jay's words. They are not the words of a professional writer. They come from a firefighter who watched his friend die. They come from a firefighter who came close to dying himself. There is language in the story that you normally don't see on STATter911.com. Some of you may even be offended by a few of the words. But these are the thoughts and emotions of a firefighter facing the biggest challenge of his life. I wouldn't think for a moment of censoring it. I urge you to read every word of it.

The Loss of Captain Bowen, Part 2

By Firefighter Jay Bettencourt, Asheville Fire Department

As Jeff and I started moving, a mist of steam and hot water hit EJ on the side of his face. He turned to see where it was coming from; knowing it meant the nozzle company was operating in that direction. When EJ turned back to face Jeff & me, we were gone. He stood there for what must have seemed like an eternity looking for us. EJ was sure we would pop out of one of those doors of the alcove. He felt confident we were still there, he just couldn’t see us. He noticed his low air alarm had stopped going off, which meant he must be dangerously low on air, and he considered calling a Mayday. As he considered his situation in that smoky dark hell, he decided to walk ten steps in the direction the mist had come from. When he got there he saw Jake Long manning a nozzle and he knew where to go from there. 

EJ hurdled Jake and made a beeline for the door running along the hose line. He followed the hose through a breached wall to a broken window and jumped out onto Ladder 1’s bucket. Just as EJ landed on the bucket he heard our Mayday go out. He wondered if we had called a Mayday for him, alerting command that we had lost a firefighter. So he told Captain Hendricks who was acting as division command, to call IC and tell them “I’m OK.” While this radio traffic is going on another Mayday comes in. And EJ realized that Jeff and I were in grave danger.

It is my great regret that I lost track of EJ during that scenario. I was overwhelmed and didn’t have the mental capacity to keep track of him. I am very grateful that he had the wherewithal to save his own life. It should be noted that after this incredible ordeal that he went through — on his second working bottle — EJ saw that there was still fire to fight and went back in for two more bottles.

Meanwhile, I had been buzzing for a considerable time and I knew I had little air for one, much less two. I yelled back to Jeff, “Call a Mayday!” and started pulling my buddy hose. My buddy hose was attached to my pack with a quarter turn latch and I had some trouble accessing it. I think at this point I took off my gloves for better dexterity. I dropped to my knees to pull Jeff’s hoses and within a few seconds I hooked up to him.

Firefighter Jay Bettencourt, Asheville Fire Department.

And, oh how my heart broke when I heard his regulator vibrating and free flowing down by his waist. It only took a couple of seconds before I was sucking rubber and had to unclip. I had listened to Jeff call the Mayday as I was hooking up to him, but I wanted to call my own. Jeff dropped down to his knees and we started crawling out. He was standing up in the smoke when he unclipped from his regulator due to running out of air. I can’t help but wonder if this could have made the difference between living and dying.

We made it to the next doorway when I stopped Jeff and told him we needed to unclip our buddy hoses for ease of movement. That went fast, just a couple of seconds. Then we made our way out the door to the center of the floor where the elevators were. I called a Mayday, and then told Jeff I was going to find a way out. He was on his hands and knees over his radio. I could hear radio traffic and I assumed Jeff was calling in the cavalry. I later found out that Jeff was vomiting in his mask.

I crawled a short distance and ran into the elevator bank. The smoke was banked down below the buttons, and I was confused because I had not seen the elevators on my way in due to the heavy smoke. This made me feel even more disoriented. I considered hitting the buttons if I could find them, but I didn’t want to take the time to look for them, and then wait for the car, if it came at all. The idea of dying while waiting for an elevator was unappealing to me, so I moved on. I later found out that the elevator was blocked open at the bottom floor and would not have come up. I started sleeping easer when I found out the elevator would not have saved us.

I left the elevator and found a limp hose. I started to follow it just like we were all taught. It did not take long for me to remember the mile of limp hose all over the floor and realize this fucking hose could be a road to nowhere. When it’s all limp there is no way to tell what’s what.

At that moment I became a little angry. I thought of all those frantic people outside, no doubt scrambling to do something to help. But what could they do? Jeff and I were all alone up here. I remembered watching Cool Hand Luke with Jeff at the station. The line, “We in here diggin’ and dying and they out there livin’” came to me and really hit hard.

A moment before I left the hose line I had a vision of my family. Not a thought or a memory, but a clear vision. Just their faces right in front of me. And without words my dear, sweet son’s face said to me, “Daddy come home, are you going to come home?” I shrugged my reply and said “I don’t know, but I’m not going without Jeff.”

Then I had my turning moment. I saw Jeff in a vision just like my son lying there suffering and in pain, and I decided I would rather he live and I die. I wanted to take all of Jeff’s pain and give him all the loving kindness in the world.

I abandoned the hose line and called my next Mayday, “Mayday, Mayday, Mayday, Come fucking get us!” As I was talking on the radio I looked up and saw a window on the west side of the building. I thought about Lowering Captain Bowen out the window then bailing out but I didn’t think I could throw him out the window and then catch him on my rope. I wondered if that tiny corner of sunlight shining through the vertical blinds of that window would be the last time I would see the sunshine. I had an overwhelming feeling that no one was coming so I ditched my mask, helmet, and radio. I did not want to take the time to put my radio back in my pocket. Every breath of that thick poison was one closer to death. Everything I did was a tradeoff for the breath it took to do it. Now that I was on my own I wanted to be light and fast. I felt sure that what ever happened to Jeff and me was up to me. I had to get us out. It was time to go.

Just by instinct I started down a hallway doing a left handed search in a rapid crawl. I kept my axe and ran into one locked door, then another locked door. Then I came to a dead end and yet another locked door. It had a sign on it saying something to the effect of employee’s only, no admittance. I shook my head and prepared myself for death.

I kept my left hand search going working my way back up the other side of the same hallway. I came to a corner and a door. I reached up and opened it and there before me was a clear lit stairwell. This stairway seemed like a stairway to heaven. I threw my axe in the threshold of the door and did a crawl back to Jeff. He had not moved and was making some groggy noises, kind of mumbling (Jay?) I grabbed him by the shoulder straps. I considered for a second doing a thigh conversion, but decided to just go. I would do it if I needed to, but lucky I didn’t. Jeff and I moved easily to the stairs and I started to drag him down. We got down to the fourth floor landing and I thought it best to call command and let them know where we were. I rolled Jeff over to get to his radio pocket, but when I got to it, his radio was gone. Now I regretted ditching mine. Ah fuck it, we both called 5th floor Maydays, those fuckers can come find us.

So I started pulling Jeff again and I was getting so tired my legs burned. I thought of doing the Filthy Fifty (a CrossFit work out) with Rick, the regular back man I work with on Rescue 3 and I was so glad I had done that. I was getting CO dumb, but I had to keep going one flight after the next. On the flight above the third floor a little bungee loop from Jeff’s gear caught on mine. It took me a moment to make sense of it. When I did, I went for the knife Clint gave me for Christmas, but could not find it. As I was jostling around looking for it, the loop fell off and I was free. I realized how bad off I was at that point. As I was pulling Jeff down the next flight of stairs, I saw his face for the first time since I had left my truck to go drive 10. I thought of how peaceful and exposed he was.  Sliding my hand under his right cheek, I cradled his head as I dragged him down the stairs. He landed funny on the next landing and his legs flopped over and lodged him in place. One at a time I moved his legs out of the way, and just as I was doing this I heard a voice from above yelling down to us. I yelled back,” HELP ME! HELP ME! HELP! HELP!”

Finally they were here. The help has finally arrived. I did not mean to, but hearing that voice made me let my guard down, and for a moment I felt like I might pass out. Jeff was set to go, and even though the troops had arrived I still went for one more flight. I was too tired to drag him like before. So I put my feet up high near Jeff, grabbed him with both hands and fell back. I dropped my ass and pulled Jeff down on to me. (DO NOT BELIEVE THE VOICE!!) I have asked everyone in the building at that time and no one called to me. It was a hallucination that caused me to let my guard down and nearly lose my life.

The next thing I remember is Paul Monrow over me trying to put his mask in my face. My airway was too damaged from the smoke and soot. I had to push it away. I tried to say, “Give it to Jeff”, but I don’t know if it ever came out. Paul asked me if I could walk and I said, “No”. Somehow Jeff got in front of Paul and me with his rescuers. I tried to stand and fell down. Paul got me up again and we staggered toward the elevator on the second floor. Paul and I started going the wrong way and Kenny Radford called to us to follow him.

We made it to the elevator and I collapsed in the corner under the buttons. The car was packed. I felt like a little kid looking at everyone’s pants. The door opened just after it closed and I heard people groaning and saying something, but I could not tell what. I felt sure one must have had a boot in the threshold of the elevator and the doors came open when they hit. I later found out that we had gone to the first floor but needed to go to the ground floor, one level below us.

When the doors opened on the ground floor I rolled backwards out of the car. It was important to me to get out of the way, so Jeff could be brought out. I knew he was worse than me, but was not sure how bad. As I looked around in the hallway I saw firefighters and medics at the west entrance and an ambulance outside. I couldn’t hear anything at first. Crawling toward the door I found myself lifted by a thousand hands, and delivered to a waiting stretcher. These few seconds seemed to go in slow motion. I looked up and all these faces kept appearing in front of me. Clint pulled my turnout gear off and kept me steady on the stretcher.

I saw my friend Thomas. I said, “Thomas, give me some water.” So in his southern drawl, he said, “All right man.” He opened a bottle of water and totally missed, pouring it all down my shirt. Later Thomas told me when he did that I gave him a “real dirty look” and he then he knew I would be OK.

I was loaded into the ambulance, and I saw Foster, a medic I know from working at 3. He told me I needed to strip down, so as I was lying on the stretcher I took off my pants and shirt, and was embarrassed because I was wearing my one and only pair of pink underwear.

I asked Foster about Jeff and said he didn’t know. He told me that his main concern at that moment was me. It was a 30second drive to the hospital. Then Foster rolled me off the ambulance and into the ER. I was quickly assigned a room, and before I knew it I was surrounded two deep by frantic doctors and nurses.

I saw Kricken, a medic I know in a flight medic uniform. I asked him if he could give me a ride in his helicopter, he said no. But proved him wrong. My thoughts went back and forth from, “I should just get up and go,” because I was truly fine, to wondering when I would die.

I asked about Captain Bowen several times, but no one would give me an answer. Eventually I started screaming his name hoping he would yell back to me. “JEFF! JEFF!” I would scream.  He never called back.

At one point a nurse started praying near my head, and I felt sure I was going to die. I asked one of the nurses if we could have some music, and wondered aloud if he had an iPod. When he laughed me off, and said “no”, I started rapping aloud. WU TANG CLAN AIN’T NOTHING TO FUCK WITH, WU TANG CLAN AIN’T NOTHING TO FUCK WITH, WE BRING THE RUCKUS, WE BRING THE MOTHER FUCKING RUCKUS.

I could hear them in the background, saying, “This guy is freaking out.” And I said, “No, this is what I’m like. This is me.” I looked over and saw a doctor greasing up an intubation tube, a 12 inch long rubber schlong. I looked up at her and said, “Doc. Please put me under before you shove that thing down my throat!”

The next thing I remember is waking up unable to open my eyes. I couldn’t move any part of my body. And felt sure I was under paralysis. I had an overwhelming urge to kick my feet and I felt like that was the key to my survival. I tried with everything I had, every ounce of strength, but my feet would not move. After this effort I passed out.

Later Kricken told me every 40 minutes or so they would see me stirring in the helicopter. They would have to be quick in getting more sedatives into me, because I would try to pull the intubation tube out of my mouth.

I came to again, and once again tried to kick my feet. This time I was successful, and was very pleased with myself. I vaguely remember feeling the sheet bounce off my legs, and losing consciousness. Sometime later, I opened my eyes and saw the outline of my wife’s face. I closed my eyes, and the outline moved to the other side of my head. Her face was directly above mine. I could only see her face. Everything else was darkness. I thought I might be dead.

The next time I woke up I could tell I was in a dark hospital room. It was quiet, and seemed like the middle of the night. I was all alone, and realized I was restrained to the bed with a giant rubber tube shoved down my throat. Throughout my time in the fire I thought I was in some sort of hell realm. I must get myself and Jeff out to escape this hell. Waking up in the hospital in that strange condition in incredible discomfort seemed like I was in a new form of hell.

A very helpful nurse came in who must have noticed that I was starting to regain consciousness. She put on a country music channel and put the remote control in my hand. Some country singer was whining at me about some loss she had had in her trailer park. My new mission in life was to make her shut up. Through some highly sedated ciphering I realized the remote control was in my hand. And though I was unable to read the words, I could make out the arrows. I started stabbing one of the arrows with my thumb as fast as I could to make this woman stop. But unfortunately it was the up volume arrow. Now Reba was whining in my ear at full pitch. “Yes, I am truly in country music hell,” I thought.

It took several hours to convince the hospital staff to remove the intubation tube. By using only my eyes and my restrained hands to communicate I let them know that I desperately wanted it removed. At first they told me, “later.” To a nurse in her comfortable uniform without a ball gag in her mouth, later means most of a graveyard shift. To me in my condition, later means five minutes. So I hit the nurse call button about every five minutes. Then they would say, “A doctor has to take it out.” To this I would indicate with my eyes only, that we are indeed in a hospital, and there should be a doctor almost everywhere. Once again, my eyes lost the debate.

I could see the clock across the room from my bed. Although in my drug delirium state I could not read it. I think it was about five hours until the doctor came and ordered the nurse, who told me she needed a doctor to take it out, to take out the intubation tube which I felt decidedly annoyed by.

I started asking about Captain Bowen immediately, and no one would give me an answer. I was told my wife was in the waiting room. So I grabbed my room phone and tried to call her. After two or three failed attempts. I called the nurse and told her my room phone was not working. She asked me if I was trying to call a local number, and I said “Yes, it is an Asheville number.” And using her best Georgia peach accent, she said to me, “Honey, you’re in Augusta, Georgia. They flew you here last night.”

I started justifying why no one would tell me about Jeff. He must be back at Mission Hospital. Maybe they flew him to Raleigh. Then the doctor, who had ordered my intubation tube removed, came in. I asked him if he knew about Captain Bowen. He looked at me as though he was about to lance a boil, and said, “Oh. He’s dead.” Just like that.

He told me that I dragged him out of the fire, and that I was a hero. I wanted to punch this doctor in the face. A moment later a wheelchair came for me, and took me to a hyperbaric chamber. There, I spent the next 90 minutes in Plexiglas tube hacking up half dollar sized chunks of black bloody yuck and contemplating the death of my friend and mentor.

When they brought me back to my room, my wife Lucy came to see me. After a few minutes with her, the firefighters that brought her down came in, along with my mom and stepfather. After a couple hours of tearful greetings, I was released to go home.

A four hour surreal drive delivered me to my house where Chief Burnett was waiting, along with other chiefs, city officials, and a barrage of firefighters. I went around and hugged each one of them individually. This trip was no small task, due to my condition. And then I told Chief I was going in. And there I was back on my sofa. Just over 24 hours after the original call to 445 Biltmore had gone out. I was at home in a daze. What just happened? Is it still happening? When will it stop happening?

I cannot express the gratitude for the firefighters who came in for Captain Bowen and me after working through the point of exhaustion on this shorthanded fire, and continued to work long after we were gone. There was still a fire to fight. Or for all the brothers that came in off duty when the news of our MAYDAY spread through the city. These people truly exemplify what it is to be a firefighter.   

Make a donation at CaptainJeffBowen.com

A must read from STATter911.com: The loss of Captain Jeff Bowen. The inside story from Firefighter Jay Bettencourt, Asheville Fire Department.

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Captain Jeff Bowen, Asheville Fire Department.

CaptainJeffBowen.com

Read Part 2

Previous coverage of this fire here, here & here

We are turning STATter911.com over this morning and tomorrow to Firefighter Jay Bettencourt of North Carolina's Asheville Fire Department. You may recognize Jay's name from our coverage of the fire on July 28, 2011 at a medical office building at 445 Biltmore Avenue that took the life of Jay's friend, mentor and captain, Jeff Bowen. Jay was seriously injured in the fire.

Late last year, Jay contacted me about telling his story. Until our conversation, I had heard a few "inside" details about Jay and Captain Bowen being trapped in the building, having run out of air from their SCBA. What I had heard, while quite dramatic in itself, did not compare with hearing it directly from the man who was beside Captain Bowen the whole time.

Jay's motive in sharing these details is two fold. He wants to help others learn from this tragic event. In addition, Jay is trying to bring attention to the website CaptainJeffBowen.com. On the website you can purchase a t-shirt and/or make a donation, with 100 percent of the proceeds going to Captain Bowen's family. Please give your support.

Firefighter Jay Bettencourt joined the Asheville Fire Department two years prior to the fire at 445 Biltmore. He also spent two years with the Swannanoa Fire Department in Buncombe County, North Carolina.

Jay tells STATter911.com that he is extremely grateful for the support he's received from the citizens of Asheville, his fellow firefighters and the leadership provided by Chief Scott Burnette.

The article below, The Loss of Captain Bowen, Part 1, are Jay's words. They are not the words of a professional writer. They come from a firefighter who watched his friend die. They come from a firefighter who came close to dying himself. There is language in the story that you normally don't see on STATter911.com. Some of you may even be offended by a few of the words. But these are the thoughts and emotions of a firefighter facing the biggest challenge of his life. I wouldn't think for a moment of censoring it. I urge you to read every word of it.

The Loss of Captain Bowen, Part 1

By Firefighter Jay Bettencourt, Asheville Fire Department

The morning of July 28 started like most shifts. We checked in with the crew working off, went over the truck and started cleaning. Before breakfast Rescue 3 responded to a HAZMAT call where we served as the RIT for Engine 11 (one of Asheville’s HAZMAT Company’s). We chuckled and joked through the call unaware of the tragedy that would soon unfold.

Upon returning to Station 3, I went to Ladder 10 for driver training. After driving Ladder 10 for the morning, Larry Morrow told me my truck had been dispatched to a structure fire at 445 Biltmore Ave.

I loaded my gear into my truck and started driving to the fire. I called Jeff, Clint and Brad on the way to get a size-up or real time report about our truck assignment. I got no answer from anyone. I later found out that they were interior on their first bottle. I considered running hot, but thought it better to go routine. I drove past 3 and briefly considered going there; I dismissed this thought and went on to the fire.

Firefighter Jay Bettencourt, Asheville Fire Department.

It was a hot, clear day as I made my way through the city on to Charlotte St. and then Biltmore Ave. At one point I wanted to speed up, but got a feeling that I was “right on time.” As I approached 445 traffic was stopped on Biltmore, and I could see some cars turning around and coming back down the hill. I pulled out of the traffic line into the oncoming lane. I went through the line of cones blocking the road and parked in a parking lot on the corner of Biltmore Ave and Brooklet.  When I pulled up, I saw 3 at the NE corner, and smoke and fire on the NW side of the top floor.

A cop was walking toward me, but stopped when he saw me getting into my turnout gear. Just as I finished dressing, Josh Walton backed down Biltmore to the hydrant on the corner where I was parked. He pulled his LDH. I walked up and told him I would catch the hydrant. Josh grabbed the Hydro assist and hydrant bag for me then drove off. He turned in on the north side of the building where Ladder 1 was operating.

I was without a radio so I stood in the street waiting for a signal of some kind. I saw a guy in an RTS (a local convalescent ambulance service) uniform standing between me and Josh who seemed to know what was happening. I nodded my head to indicate we were working together and a moment later he swung his hand around in the air in a circular motion which meant Josh was ready for whatever. I charged the line.

Rescue 3 was parked on the NE corner of 445 Biltmore Ave. I jogged up the hill about a block to my truck and noticed L1 booming up as I passed the north parking lot access road. I got to 3 and pulled a radio, air pack and axe. I turned on my radio but did not select a fire channel.

I walked in front of the north side of the building and saw smoke and fire coming out of a vented window. Weezy and Josh were doing engineer stuff and Mike Russell was on the first floor of the parking deck functioning as safety. I heard him yelling to the drivers to put their helmets on. The ladder was on ground floor 1 – below the first. I went up to Russell thinking he was at staging command and asked him what I should do. He told me Rescue was inside and that I should wait for my crew to come out and join them. As he said that, Chief Burnett walked up in full turnout gear and helmet! I knew this was big at that point. Just then I saw Caption Bowen walk out of the building. I was struck to see him alone, but ran over to join him. 

I yelled, “Captain, are you tryin’ to burn something without me?”

Then he replied, “Well you’re the one that wanted to drive.”

“That will never happen again.”

I followed him over to staging just on the south side of the west ground floor entrance. I saw Clint and Brad there getting hot swaps and went to help. Paul Walker and I put a new bottle on Brad. I looked up from that to see EJ and Larry and CO standing behind E2. Chief Marzzella assigned Larry RIT and EJ said his crew was in rehab and wanted to join rescue. EJ was told to report this to command, which he did, then grabbed an axe off of E2.

Now we were going in. We walked quickly down the hall to the stairwell and headed up. The stairs were very smoky and I clipped in my regulator immediately. I was surprised at how thick the smoke was so far down the line. When I hooked up I looked up and down the line to see everyone else on air as well. We moved up the stairs and I thought about the elevators, and remembered the SOG I had recently read which stated high rise fires that were on the 5th floor or below would be fought from the stairs, not elevators. At that point I put the elevator out of my mind.

We took a long time going up the stairs not wanting to breath hard and waste our precious air. I realized, as I am sure everyone else did, that we were going to have limited time to operate on the fire floor due to our dwindling air supply.

At no point had I received a situation report about the fire or conditions or our assignment or even a radio channel, which would bite me later.

We moved up the stairs in a line. Jeff in the lead followed by Clint, myself, Brad and then EJ. On the fourth floor landing we started to encounter dry hose, which I assumed was a high-rise pack. It was attached to the stand pipe and sort-of stretched. Jeff tripped (on the hose I assumed) and Clint stopped to ask if he was okay. Jeff said he was fine and kept moving. We encountered more spaghetti hoses on the 5th floor landing and I noticed there were a lot of hoses around, but NO WATER!

We entered the 5th floor into very smoky conditions, but not much heat. This has been a point of contention with other companies and firefighters. Some firefighters came out reporting extremely high heat; however, due to the leap frogging of crews on this fire every company saw this fire in a different state. The smoke was grayish and diffused my light. There was about 2-3 feet of visibility. Our team moved through the thick haze fast, following a hose line and darting around corners. As we circled our way around the building I knew I was becoming disoriented, but felt it was important to keep up with the man in front of me. I assumed he had a good idea of where we were going.

The smoke seemed to be lighter as we traveled along the line. I saw a clamp that belonged to Brad holding a door open. I was glad to see he had used one of his new clamps, and that it seemed to be working well. We went through the chocked doorway into a room where the hose ended. Our company formed a circle around the nozzle and squatted down. We stayed there for quite some time in a circle.

We waited there for a couple of minutes while Jeff called for water and we all burned our air supply. I noticed everyone checking their air, and I thought we would be ineffective due to our low air and lack of water. I thought we should be searching for victims or fire extension, but there we sat waiting for water. Jeff called for water. Then Chief Denning told us to come out if we had no task. Jeff said we would stay and wait for water or stand by in case another crew needed us. Captain Eddie Wyatt called on the radio and said we needed to open the stand pipe valve. The valve was open. Later Russell called to E6 and told them the ladder was their method of egress. I had no idea where that would be or where the fire was, or how to get back to the stairs other than following the hose.

Around this time 6 gets water and calls it into command. Jeff gets on the radio and asks 6 if they could use our help. They said yes and we were off swerving through the dark and smoky abyss. We made our way into a hallway that had an alcove off of it containing six (?) small rooms. We stopped there while Jeff did god knows what. It was very hard for the 5 of us to communicate well since our crew was too large for everyone to take part in interactions. I trust my company and my officer. I knew Captain Bowen would lead us in the right direction. I told Brad I was going to search the small rooms even though I thought they had already been searched. We didn’t have anything else to do at the time. Due to our lack of water I felt ineffectual throughout the operation.

After that I poked my head into a room across the hall from the alcove. This room was full of files that were burning in the decay stage. There were little camp fires on top of every box.  It was a room with an exterior wall lined with windows. Talk began about breaking the windows. Someone checked in with Jeff and he gave the all clear. EJ radioed down to command to have the ladder operator stand clear while we took the windows. After we took them I looked out and the ladder was nowhere to be seen. We were on the west side of the building and had mistakenly thought we were on the north side, where the ladder was. I saw how truly lost I was. At about this time Brad’s low air alarms started going off. He told Jeff and, after some, delay we started making our way out.

I thought that this was collectively the best decision we had made. As we worked our way out along the hose line, I saw a helmet and a light pop out from around a corner. I asked who it was and if they were okay. They said they were good and we moved on. There was a lot of starting and stopping as we made our way out. I was too far back in the line and it was too dark for me to be clued in.

The order heading out was Jeff, Clint, Brad, me and EJ. We rounded a couple of corners and ran across Mike Branon flaking out a high rise pack. I asked who it was and by his cursing I could tell it was Mike!

“Oh fuck this fuckin’ hose. Fuck Man. God Damn it.”

Our overabundance of limp useless hose was very clear to me. Again we stood around for a while then started moving out. At some point the order of our line changed. As we got to the stairs I saw Clint go down followed by Brad, then Jeff blew by the stairs and started heading down an unfamiliar hallway.

In hind sight it was clear where we were, but at the time I was very confused. I looked back at EJ in shock and said, “We gotta get him.” So off we went chasing after Jeff. I was yelling, “Jeff, Jeff, we have to go down, there is no one here. We have to go down. Let’s go.” But every time I got close to him he would dart off and go deeper into the fire area. I could not imagine why Jeff was doing this; his low air alarm had started soon after Brad’s. Mine started just as Jeff darted away, and I knew we were in a bad way. Around this point I thought to myself, “I bet they will give us the rest of the shift off for this bullshit.”

Jeff made his way back into the alcove where we finally caught him. He looked surprised as if he was expecting something to be there that was not, maybe a downed firefighter, maybe a charged hose line. At this point I grabbed Jeff by the pack straps and yelled, “We are leaving!”

I was taking control. EJ was behind pushing Jeff on. We made it a few steps and I realized I had no idea where to go. I yelled to EJ, “You keep pushing him. I am going ahead to find our way.” I turned and took maybe 3 steps around a corner and realized what a bad plan that was. The smoke had intensified and was getting darker. I turned to go back and Jeff was right there as I turned around. He said, “I am out of air. I need to buddy breathe” in a frantic voice. My heart fell to my boot. Though I was scared, Captain Bowen seemed to be back in the game and that gave me some comfort.

The Loss of Captain Bowen, Part 2 will run tomorrow on STATter911.com

East Spencer, NC chief called ‘ringleader’ is fired in teen firefighter taser incident. Assistant chief cited as a ‘abusive’ & ‘negative influence’ told not to return.

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Former East Spencer fire chief Shane Cranfield.

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Previous coverage of this story

More from WSOC-TV

Thirty-seven-year-old Shane Cranfield, who was a part-time employee of the East Spencer Fire Department in North Carolina, was fired yesterday. In addition, 29-year-old Assistant Chief Allen Carlyle, a former chief of the department, has been told not to return as a volunteer. This comes after the incident last month where police say the men shocked an18-year-old firefighter with a Taser nine times during a fire department Christmas party.

Cranfield and Carlyle are both facing assault charges. A town police officer who allowed his Taser to be used in the incident resigned and is also facing criminal charges. 

Here's more from Karissa Minn at the Salisbury Post:

In a dismissal letter to Cranfield, Town Administrator Macon Sammons Jr. said leaders must serve as role models and set standards. They need “the wisdom, the courage and the judgment” to guide others in the right direction, he said.

“Instead, as our fire chief, you were the ringleader of an incident which created community disdain toward the reputation of our fire department and a major source of embarrassment to the town,” Sammons wrote.

A similar letter to Carlyle is more frank.

“Your behavior in this incident was abusive and totally unacceptable,” Sammons wrote. “Further, we believe that you have become a negative influence within our fire department.”

Former assistant chief and chief Allen Carlyle.

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News reports: East Spencer, NC fire Chief & former chief borrow on-duty officer’s taser to shock teen firefighter 9 times. Cops resign. Chiefs face assault charges.

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East Spencer Fire Department website

From Nathan Hardin at SalisburyPost.com:

Two East Spencer firefighters and an East Spencer police officer are being charged after investigators said they shocked a junior firefighter nine times at a department Christmas party.

Fire Chief Shane Cranfield and former fire chief Allen Carlyle borrowed a Taser from on-duty police officer James Lambeth about 6 p.m. at the fire department’s Dec. 10 Christmas party, according to Rowan County investigators.

The two firefighters discharged the stun gun several times, the report said, scaring 18-year-old John Resino of Salisbury. 

Former Chief Allen Carlyle from East Spencer Fire Department website.

From WSOC-TV:

Thursday night, a friend told Eyewitness News, 18-year-old John Resino has been having chest pains ever since the party at the East Spencer Fire Department about two weeks ago.

According to the incident report, the Resino reported two firefighters assulted him with a Taser.

The sheriff's office says Chief Shane Cranfield and firefighter Allen Carlyle shocked him repeatedly. Resino tried to hide in another room, but according to reports, the two firefighters broke a door handle and shocked him up to nine times.

Current Chief Shane Cranfield from WBTV.com

From the AP:

Rowan County firefighters and a police officer are facing criminal charges over an incident in which an 18-year-old junior firefighter was shocked with a stun gun at a Christmas party.

County sheriff's deputies say East Spencer Fire Chief Shane Cranfield and firefighter Allen Carlyle borrowed a Taser gun from on-duty police officer James Lambeth to shock an 18-year-old high school student earlier this month.

Investigators say the teenager ran into another room, but the two firefighters followed him and shocked him as many as nine times.

Lambeth has since resigned from the East Spencer Police Department. Investigators plan to charge him with failure to discharge his duty, a misdemeanor. Cranfield and Carlyle face assault charges.

None of the three could be immediately reached Friday. 

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

Asheville Fire Department chief says it took ‘extended’ amount of time for an effective attack on fire that killed Capt. Jeff Bowen. Also, video of weekend fundraiser for Bowen family.

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Read entire Asheville Citizen-Times article

I am on a road trip with the family heading to FRI in Atlanta. Our travels brought us to Asheville, North Carolina where we quickly learned of many ongoing fundraisers by the community to benefit the family of Asheville Fire Department Capt. Jeff Bowen. Capt. Bowen was killed on July 28 in what has been identified as an intentionally set fire at 445 Biltmore Avenue.

Yesterday, before we had a chance to check out the motorcycle ride and weekend Memorial Band Jam at Mack Kell's Pub & Grill up the street from our hotel, it came to us. The many bikers, with a police and fire escort, traveled Tunnel Road as we were at a traffic light. It took almost 15 minutes before it passed our location and quite a few citizens paused to greet them. The video is above.

The list of fundraisers that have occurred and will occur is quite impressive. Check it out here on the website of IAFF Local 865. And here is a link to make donations to a fund set up to assist in the education of Jeff Bowen's children and for other fallen firefighters.

Also, yesterday the Asheville Citizen-Times published a very detailed article by Jeffrey Ostendorff that looks at what is known, so far, about the fire department operation at the July 28 fire. Ostendorff uses public records (including the fire incident report), fireground audio recordings released by the city under an open records request and an interview with Chief Scott Burnette.

The article provides some insight into the actions of Chief Bowen's crew and also focuses on difficulty in getting water to the fire.

Here's an excerpt:

Crews from Engine 2 went to the fourth floor to hook up to the standpipe station while Engine 1 hooked to the standpipe connection on the Biltmore Avenue side of the building.

But the water never came.

It was nearly 38 minutes before firefighters, using a hose brought in through a window from a ladder truck, got water on the fire, according to the radio recordings.

Burnette in his interview Thursday did not dispute the time frame, though he said it was still being investigated. He said it took an “extended” amount of time before firefighters were able to mount an effective interior attack.

Chief & assistant chief charged with shooting power line down. Fire started & electricity cut for 16,000 customers in Red Oak, North Carolina.

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Red Oak Community Rural Fire Department website

Chief Bryant Beddard and Justin Stargardt (listed in one article as assistant chief) of the Red Oak Community Rural Fire Department in Greenville, North Carolina were arrested and charged with shooting at electric power fixtures and setting fire to a wooded area last Thursday. The men are accused of knocking out two insultators on a transmission line, knocking loose a 115-kilovolt power line that started the fire. Power was lost for about a half-hour to 16,000 customers served by five substations in a fairly large area.

Chief Beddard has also been employed by Greenville Fire-Rescue since 2006.  

From the Daily Reflector:

Red Oak firefighters responded about 4:30 p.m. Thursday to a fire in a wooded area of the Frog Level community, according to Eddie Rabil, the department's board chairman. They discovered that two fixtures were shot and a power feeder line was cut, falling to the ground and sparking a fire, a Red Oak fire official said.

Rabil said the department, with an active 30-40 person roster, didn't know that Beddard and Stargardt were linked to the incident until charges were brought against them. Both men are thought of as responsible individuals, active in providing skilled fire-rescue and leadership to the community, he said.

From WITN-TV:

Red Oak's web site says Stargardt is its assistant fire chief with 5 years experience, while Beddard has been with Red Oak for 9 years.

The fire department's board of directors chairman said in a statement that they are shocked and saddened with the arrests. Eddie Rabil says both men have taken voluntary leave of absences at Red Oak, while "we fully support our firefighters who have been charged in this incident."

The WITN-TV website has more than 150 comments on this story. Click here to read them.

Chief Bryant Beddard on the left and Assistant Chief Justin Stargardt on the right.

Funeral arrangements for Captain Jeff Bowen, Asheville Fire Department. Firefighter Jay Bettencourt getting out of hospital.

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Image from City of Asheville website.

Facebook page honoring Captain Bowen

Previous coverage of this story

Arrangements via FireNews.net:

Visitation: Monday, August 01, from 18:00 – 21:00 hours. Biltmore Baptist Church, 35 Clayton Road, Arden, NC. (Arden is approximately six miles south of Asheville, just off of Interstate 26 at Exit 37). 

Memorial Service: Tuesday, August 02, 11:00 hours. Same location as Visitation.

From Citizens-Times.com:

Asheville Firefighter Jay Bettencourt, injured yesterday in the line of duty and transported to the Augusta, Georgia Medical Center for treatment, is in the process of being discharged and returning to Asheville. He is reportedly feeling well.

From an article by Laura graff at the Winston-Salem Journal:

Watch the procession

Firefighters brought their fire trucks to overpasses from Winston-Salem to Asheville this afternoon to honor an Asheville firefighter who died fighting a blaze this week.

The firefighter, Capt. Jeffrey Bowen, went into cardiac arrest while fighting a fire at an Asheville medical center on Thursday. His body was taken to Wake Forest Baptist Health for an autopsy.

Winston-Salem Assistant Fire Chief Terry Carter said Bowen's body was taken back to Asheville this afternoon.  

UPDATE Asheville, North Carolina Fire Captain Jeffrey Bowen dead. Seven other firefighters injured at medical office building near Mission Hospital. Watch afternoon press conference.

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Watch WSAP-TV live

More from Raleigh/Wake County Firefighting Blog

Asheville Fire Department

Read City of Asheville Press Release

Funeral arrangements

Asheville Fire Department Captain Jeffrey Bowen died this afternoon at a four-alarm fire at a medical office building. Details of the 1:00 PM fire were released at a press conference shortly after 5:00 PM.

Officials report that Captain Bowen was able to voice a mayday before he was found. Bowen, 37, was the father of three children.

Firefighter Jay Bettencourt, who was working with Bowen, has been taken to a burn center in Augusta, Georgia. Six other firefighters were treated for heat related issues at nearby Mission Hill Hospital.

The last time an Asheville firefighter died due to a fire was in 1982.

Below is the raw video from the press conference by Chief Scott Burnette:

From WSPA-TV:

"This is a terrible tragedy for out city, for all of us in the Asheville Fire Department and most importantly his wife Stacey. We pray for her," Chief Scott Burnette said.

Bowen was a 13-year veteran of the department and assigned to Rescue Company 3.

"We will be doing a full analysis to find out what occured in this situation," Burnette said. 

From WLOS-TV:

One Asheville firefighter has died after a fire in a medical building near Mission Hospital.  Eight other firefighters were taken to the hospital, many suffering from heat exhaustion and smoke inhalation.

Fire crews were called to the building at 445 Biltmore Avenue just after noon, Thursday.  Flames could be seen shooting from windows on the fifth floor of the building, which houses private medical practices and clinics.  Dozens of employees, patients, and visitors were evacuated.

From the AP:

Officials 3say several firefighters have been treated at Asheville's Mission Hospital emergency room following a fire at a nearby office building.

One firefighter died in the fire and eight others have been hurt, according WGHP-TV in Greensboro.

Mission Hospital spokeswoman Merrell Gregory says nine people were seen Thursday afternoon in connection with the blaze.

Gregory says she can't say whether the nine were still being treated, the extent of their injuries or what caused them. Calls placed to the Ashville Fire Department and city officials were not immediately returned.

Gregory says the fire occurred in a building called 445 Biltmore. The hospital has activated a command center and a triage unit to deal with the incident.

Image from WLOS-TV.

UPDATED Video: Tornadoes in North Carolina. As many as two dozen people dead.

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From Sanford.

Click here for links to live coverage & emergency radio traffic

Pictures from Mike Legeros

Raleigh/Wake Firefighting Blog run down of area FD's response to the storms

The National Weather Service reports as many as 24 people dead and widespread damage after multiple tornadoes roared through Central North Carolina Saturday afternoon. USAR teams and other firefighters are searching damaged buildings for more victims. Above and below are a number of videos showing the tornadoes and the damage.

From WRAL-TV:

Two dozen people might have been killed by severe storms and tornadoes that struck at least 20 counties in North Carolina Saturday, according to preliminary reports Sunday.

WRAL News has confirmed 18 deaths, while the National Weather Service received preliminary reports of 24 deaths.

The worst-hit area appears to be Bertie County, where authorities say 10 people are dead there and one is missing.

Raleigh Fire Department conducting a search. Picture by Mike Legeros. Click here for more from Legeros.com.

From WTVD-TV:

Emergency crews are still searching for victims in the hard-hit parts of the state. Authorities warn the death toll is likely to rise further Sunday as searchers probed shattered homes and businesses.

"There's a lot of work that needs to be done in these areas that are most heavily impacted," said Doug Hoell, the state's director of emergency management. "There's a lot of debris out there that's got to be cleaned up."

Man driving with his family on I-95 in North Carolina.

Tornadoes were reported in Raleigh, Holly Springs, Roxboro, Fayetteville, downtown Wilson and Roanoke Rapids according to WRAL meteorologist Nate Johnson.

Emergency crews rescued a family in Person County that had taken shelter in their basement.  They became trapped when a tree fell on their home.

Another family on I-95 spots a tornado.

From newsobserver.com:

One apparent tornado ripped through Sanford, carving a path about a mile long. The winds ripped the roof off a Lowe's store, turning a delivery truck on its side in the parking lot. Along with one man reported killed, another had to be cut from an overturned car, and several people were injured.

Wind damage in Johnston County forced authorities to close Interstate 95 near Micro about 5:45 p.m. There also were reports of severe structural damage and vehicles overturned in Dunn and in Wilson.

More from Sanford.

And another view from Sanford.

Damage from Sanford.

The video above is of a tornado reported to be near Fayetteville. 

Damage in Fayetteville.

Newscast from WTVD-TV.

Live coverage & public safety audio: Possible tornadoes moving through North Carolina.

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WRAL-TV's live stream, above, has been intermittent.

Today was identified as a high risk day for severe weather in North Carolina along the I-95 corridor. Storms are now firing in the Raleigh/Wake County area and damage is reported along with possible tornado sightings. A USAR deployment has been ordered for at least one possible tornado in the Raleigh.

You can watch and listen live through these links. 

WTVD-TV

Wake County police, fire & EMS

Wake County & Cary County fire & EMS

Video: Charlotte, North Carolina house fire. A department telling its own story.

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From the Charlotte Fire Department's YouTube Channel:

A first alarm assignment arrived at 401 East 15th Street shortly after 1600 on March 16th, 2011 to find heavy smoke and fire issuing from this self ventilated single family dwelling. Ladder 1 commenced an aggressive interior attack from the rear of the structure, and in conjunction with the balance of the assignment, brought the fire under control in approximately 20 minutes. The Fire Investigation Task Force self dispatched and determined the fire to be incendiary in origin. There were no injuries reported.

The Charlotte Fire Department is one of a number of departments that uses the Internet and social media to tell its own story and is part of the presentation I will be giving at FDIC today at 1:30 PM in room 125-126. Other topics include communicating with the public when there is a major emergency in your community and when there is bad news that impacts your department's reputation. I hope to see you there.

Helmet-cam: Durham, North Carolina house fire.

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This is a March 6 fire in a duplex on Clark Street in Durham, North Carolina. I saw it when it had originally been posted with music. To me it’s much nicer and more interesting to view it with the sound of what is going on. According to FireCritic.com, this was the information with the original video:

Durham Fire Department in the Bull City NC. Riding with B shift Ladder 1 on a single story duplex fire. Quick knockdown and vertical ventilation. Units responding; E-1, L-1, Sq-1, B-1 first due district, E-2, L-2, B-2, E-9 second due district.

Bullet narrowly misses firefighter sleeping in Raleigh, North Carolina fire station. Women battling out on the street.

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Excerpt from WRAL-TV:

A fight between two women outside a Raleigh fire station on South Saunders Street early Thursday could have ended in tragedy when a bullet went flying into the building, just inches above a sleeping firefighter.

“He was lying in bed asleep, and all of a sudden, he heard this loud sound right behind his head,” Capt. Dale Wall, with Raleigh Fire Station 2, said. “They didn’t really know what had happened until they got up and started looking around and noticed the slug on the floor and noticed the hole through the partition.”

The bullet missed firefighter Will Smith by 6 inches.

From WFMY-TV:

Wall told WRAL they think the bullet traveled through the base of the fire station window, over the bed where Smith was sleeping, through the wall next to his bed, then through an open door and down the hallway before ricocheting off a concrete wall.

Smith said he thought a transformer had blown and was shocked to see the bullet hole six inches from where he was sleeping. Smith added that he usually sleeps on his side but wasn’t during the incident. Otherwise, he said he believes he most likely would have been shot.

Quick Takes: February 21, 2011.

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Audio from mayday at FDNY 5th-alarm in Brooklyn. Union says staffing cuts played a role in fire. FDNY says it was the wind & an open door: This is the fire that broke out during high winds Saturday evening in a 70-unit, six-story apartment building. It left a resident dead and injured 20 firefighters. One of the firefighters, who was burned, was rescued by other firefighters during a mayday. Firegeezer.com has coverage of this fire. Uniformed Firefighters Association President Steve Cassidy believes crews were hampered by the recent removal of one firefighter from 60 FDNY engine companies. From WINS Radio – Cassidy claims that because the first unit to arrive on the scene Saturday had one less firefighter, “it took [the crew] five minutes longer to get water on the fire.” An FDNY statement gives a different view, “Contrary to the UFA’s statement, it was the open door problem – greatly exacerbated by severe winds – that fueled this fire into an unstoppable conflagration … “.

It was windy here too: The high winds hitting the East Coast kept firefighters busy. Prince George’s County, Maryland was so busy it received mutual aid from across the Chesapeake Bay and Western Maryland. We have lots of videos and details, including arrival video of two burning homes in College Park. Click here and here for our coverage. 

The wind helped keep Baltimore County busy: Besides brush fire, since Friday there have been a significant number of muli-alarm structure fires in Baltimore County. One of those was a third-alarm commerical fire on Pulaski Highway on Saturday. Check out Michael Schwartzberg’s video on this one.

Early video from Loudoun County, Virginia house fire: A house fire on Friday in the Broadlands community. Click here.

It’s Not My Emergency: I have mentioned this before, but if you are interested in how social media and public safety interact you need to be reading Chief Bill Boyd’s blog, It’s Not My Emergency. I’ve been playing catch up on the thoughts of the fire chief from Bellingham, Washington. It’s well worth your time.

Unfortunately it was HIS emergency: In Conesus, New York, Lt. Jim Wood didn’t realize at first the fire he was responding to was in his own home. He soon found out. His family was not home when the fire broke out. Click here for that story.

Fighting a house fire from the shoulder of Interstate 85: That was the case in McAdenville, North Carolina (Gaston County). The back of the burning home was next to the highway. Here’s the story.

 

Cop and fire chief charged with arson, but only one person was arrested: A little riddle to start the week. Late last week Morris County, New Jersey officials held a press conference to say a Morris County Sheriff’s officer and the assistant chief of the District 5 VFD in Parsippany are accused of arson. Actually it is just one person, 33-year-old Jason Campbell, who fills both roles. The house fires were in 2008 and 2010 and the case was cracked as part of an undercover investigation and the use of a confidential informant. Other fires are being looked at. Read more.