Author: Chris Ferrari

  • Causes of Recent Fatal NY House Fires Remain Unknown

    Causes of Recent Fatal NY House Fires Remain Unknown

    Jan. 17, 2023 In Buffalo, five children perished on New Year’s Eve and a fire on July 4 claimed three people.

    By Stephen T. Watson Source The Buffalo News, N.Y. (TNS) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    Buffalo Fire Commissioner William Renaldo
    Buffalo Fire Commissioner William Renaldo

    Jan. 17—Twice in six months, early morning fires that ripped through homes in Buffalo left those families and the larger community mourning a terrible loss of life.

    The first, on the Fourth of July, killed a widely admired local physician and two of his daughters. The second, on New Year’s Eve, left five children, all 10 years old or younger, dead.

    In both cases, Buffalo fire investigators have determined the fires were accidental.

    But they have not determined precisely why the fires began.

    “Investigators put in a lot of hours, a lot of time,” Fire Commissioner William Renaldo said in a recent interview about the July 4 fire. “It’s a very tragic event and we want to get some closure. We want to get closure for his family, want to get closure for the public.”

    It’s often more straightforward to confirm, or rule out, whether a fire was intentionally set, experts said.

    But it can be more difficult to pin down the specific cause of an accidental fire, particularly one so damaging.

    This leaves those who knew and cared about the fire victims searching for answers.

    “A lot of people were hurting,” Kathy Diina, who lived across the street from the family of Dr. Jonathan Daniels for about 25 years, said of their neighborhood.

    The two devastating fires struck homes located about 1 1/2 miles apart.

    The July 4, 2022, fire was reported just after 3:30 a.m. at 194 Huntington Ave., between Parker and Voorhees avenues, in the Central Park neighborhood.

    Dr. Jonathan Daniels, one of three Black male pediatricians practicing in Buffalo, died along with his daughters Jordan, 27, and Jensen, 23.

    His wife, Janessa Givens Daniels, was able to get out of the home on her own and was taken to Erie County Medical Center for treatment of smoke inhalation.

    Another daughter, Jillian, wasn’t home at the time. A dog also died in the fire.

    News of the deaths of Daniels and his daughters brought an outpouring of grief from the local medical community.

    Daniels, 53, practiced at Main Pediatrics for 19 years before he was recruited in 2021 to start the pediatric clinic at Urban Family Practice on Jefferson Avenue.

    He also served as associate dean of admissions at the University at Buffalo Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, where he recruited students from underrepresented backgrounds.

    A tribute to Daniels, published in November by UB, highlighted his dedication to diversifying the medical field and to supporting students of color.

    “This is my 42nd year in pastoral ministries, and I’m telling you I don’t meet a lot of Jonathan Danielses. They just don’t exist,” the Rev. Kinzer M. Pointer, pastor of Liberty Missionary Baptist Church and a leader of the African American Health Equity Task Force, told UB. “And that is not an indictment of us as much as it is an acknowledgement of who Dr. Daniels was.”

    Initially, officials said they believed the blaze started on the second floor of the Daniels’ home before spreading to the attic.

    At one point or another, the homeowners’ insurance company, the city and the Daniels family all had their own investigators looking into the cause.

    Buffalo fire investigators were able to rule out arson, Renaldo said recently. Investigators are looking at malfunctioning electrical, mechanical or heating and cooling systems as a potential cause, he said, including window air-conditioning units in use in the home.

    There were smoke detectors and they were in working order, Renaldo said.

    He was asked whether, given the amount of time that’s passed, it’s possible the precise cause won’t ever be known.

    “We’re hoping that’s not the case here,” Renaldo said. “But there are fires like this, similar to this, that are very difficult to determine.”

    The intensity of the fire is one reason, the fire commissioner said.

    “A lot of physical evidence was destroyed, which made it even more difficult to come to the exact cause,” he said.

    The investigation into the fire on Dartmouth Avenue, off Bailey Avenue in the University Heights neighborhood, is at an earlier stage.

    Clarence and Lisa Liggans lived in the home with two of their adult children and six grandchildren, all siblings.

    The fire was reported around 7:30 a.m. Dec. 31, when Clarence Liggans was delivering newspapers for The Buffalo News. The two adult children were able to escape and Lisa Liggans managed to carry out her youngest grandchild, 8-month-old Ziyah Robinson.

    The baby suffered minor smoke inhalation while Lisa Liggans was seriously burned and, as of late last week, remained at ECMC’s burn unit.

    Firefighters got to the other children. Three of them died at the scene: Aniyah Green, 10; Joelle Liggans, 8; and Jalissa Liggans, 7.

    Two others were taken to Oishei Children’s Hospital, where they succumbed to their injuries: Denise Keith, 4, and Nehemiah Robinson, 2.

    “There are no words,” Patricia Montgomery, great aunt to the five children, recently told The News.

    The probe into the fire continues as officials wait to interview other witnesses, Renaldo said at a news conference last week.

    “We’re not 100% (sure) what caused the fire. We know it’s accidental because we ruled out all the other causes,” he said. “But we don’t know actually what was ignited at this time yet.”

    Over the course of investigating fires like these, officials will examine evidence and conduct interviews with neighbors and fire survivors to rule out as many potential causes as they can, said Sal Colangelo, former chief of the city’s fire marshal’s office, who now performs this work in the private sector.

    Cigarettes, burning candles, malfunctioning hot water tanks or furnaces, lightning strikes and electrical failures all can spark a house fire, he said, and all leave telltale signs.

    “So you start eliminating all that stuff. And then you narrow it down to the area of origin. Where you determine, ‘The fire started here,’ and then you see what’s in that area that would cause it,” Colangelo said.

    Unfortunately, he said, sometimes investigations do reach the point where the fire’s cause must be listed as “undetermined.”

    Givens Daniels, a UB administrator, and her surviving daughter, Jillian Daniels, did not respond to messages seeking comment. Their attorney, John Elmore, declined comment on their behalf.

    The Daniels’ fire-damaged home was torn down around October. Neighbors had expressed safety concerns about its continued presence, but Renaldo said Buffalo fire investigators wanted to collect as much evidence as possible before it was demolished.

    The empty lot where the home once stood is now covered with straw. On a recent visit, a small, solar-powered cross stood along the sidewalk and bouquets of flowers rested at the base of a tree.

    “They were wonderful neighbors,” said Diina, the Daniels’ neighbor.

    “All summer long, my porch was open for counseling,” she said of the informal gatherings that replaced typical neighborhood parties. “Nobody celebrated the whole summer. It was that disturbing.”

  • Ambulance Struck Along Icy ND Highway Leaving Six Hurt

    Ambulance Struck Along Icy ND Highway Leaving Six Hurt

    Jan. 17, 2023 One of the Edmore Ambulance Service providers suffered serious injuries when the unit was rear-ended by a vehicle.

    Source Grand Forks Herald (TNS) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    Jan. 16—EDMORE, N.D. — Six people were injured after an ambulance was rear ended in northeast North Dakota on Monday, Jan. 16.

    The crash happened about 4 miles north of Edmore around 11:16 a.m. on icy roads and foggy weather conditions, the North Dakota Highway Patrol said in a news release.

    Edmore Ambulance Service was on scene attending to an injured driver from a previous rollover crash off of State Highway 1. The ambulance was partially in the northbound lane of State Highway 1 while the ambulance crew attended to the injured driver.

    A Jeep, driven by 89-year-old Leonard Klein, was northbound shortly after the ambulance had been attending to the injured driver from the previous crash. The release said Klein struck the ambulance from behind and suffered serious injuries due to the crash.

    Ambulance crew members were also injured:

    * Ambulance driver: Doug Loff, 62 of Edmore, minor injuries

    * Bruce Berg; 67 of Edmore. Minor injuries, assisting in treating patient

    * Taylor Trontvet, 32 of Edmore, serious injuries, treating patient

    * Megan Diseth; 35 of Edmore, minor injuries, treating patient

    * Kathy Borgen; 63 of St. Cloud, Florida, minor injuries. She was being treated in the ambulance.

    Langdon Ambulance Service was paged and brought Klein to Langdon Prairie Health for treatment. Trontvet and Diseth also were transported to Langdon Prairie Health to be treated for their injuries. Borgen was transported to First Care Hospital to be treated for her injuries.

    The crash remains under investigation. The release noted no charges have been filed in the crash.

    Edmore is about 93 miles northwest of Grand Forks.

  • Two Children Perish in NC House Fire

    Two Children Perish in NC House Fire

    Jan. 17, 2023 Bostic firefighters pulled the two- and three-year-old children from the home and performed CPR to no avail.

    Source Firehouse.com News

    Two children perished in a Rutherford County house fire despite efforts of Bostic firefighters. 

    The children, two and three, were found in a back bedroom, and brought out by crews, WSPA reported.

    The Rutherford County Fire Marshal said fire started in the living room.

    Some neighbors said what they saw Friday morning sticks with them.

    “They come running out with a baby in their hands, throw it on the ground and start doing CPR and chest compressions, then they come out with another baby, throw them on the ground with chest compressions, CPR, and then later on I ask them how the babies doing, and they say the babies died,” Ronald Malton, a neighbor, told reporters. 

    The children’s grandfather found firefighters when he returned to the house after taking their mother to work. 

  • Whistleblower: Firefighter Training at NY Air Base was Fraudulent

    Whistleblower: Firefighter Training at NY Air Base was Fraudulent

    Jan. 16, 2023 Over a three-year period, more than 120 Niagara Falls Air Reserve fire department employees received credit for trainings they did not attend.

    By Matt Glynn Source The Buffalo News, N.Y. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    Jan. 14—A federal investigation found officials with the Niagara Falls Air Reserve Station’s fire department filed falsified firefighting and safety training records, crediting employees for training they never received over a three-year period.

    The investigation was prompted nearly three years ago by an unidentified former member of the fire department who became a whistleblower, according to the U.S. Office of Special Counsel.

    “These trainings are intended to instruct first responders on procedures and protocols to handle life-threatening emergency situations,” said Special Counsel Henry J. Kerner. “It is unconscionable that so many employees and instructors whose job is to save lives would be complicit in this type of fraud.”

    The investigation found that from 2017 to 2019, over 120 fire department employees received credit for trainings they did not attend, 41 instructors submitted false training documents for validation, and six fire department employees improperly verified false training documents.

    “The evidence showed many (Niagara Falls Air Reserve Station Fire Department) employees — both students and instructors — on leave during the reported training courses, which they could not have reasonably taken or taught,” the Office of Special Counsel said. “Students also received credit for multiple training courses that overlapped, including courses taught by different instructors that occurred on the same date and time.”

    The fire department provides fire protection and emergency services to the Niagara Falls Air Reserve Station, responding to medical emergencies, motor vehicle accidents, rescue calls and incidents involving hazardous materials.

    The Office of Special Counsel released its findings this month. The investigation was launched in March 2020 and completed in 2021. The Office of Special Counsel said the Air Force’s report largely substantiated the claims. The Air Force’s report said the investigation “did not reveal a criminal violation.” Employees’ names in that report were redacted.

    The Air Force’s report said the conduct of three fire department officials, who were not named, constituted “gross mismanagement,” because untrained emergency personnel had responded to incidents that could have put first responders at risk and compromised public safety.

    “These officials failed to ensure proper internal controls to monitor and verify training compliance,” the Office of Special Counsel said. “The agency indicated it would consider disciplinary action for these individuals.”

    A spokesman for the Niagara Falls Air Reserve Station did not respond to a request to comment on Saturday.

    Under a change made in 2021, the fire department now reports directly to the 914th Air Reserve Wing mission support commander, “to improve oversight and provide clear, concise communication through a direct chain of command,” the Office of Special Counsel said.

    The Air Reserve Wing also put into place a revised training schedule to complete makeup training and has implemented audits to verify training attendance and record keeping.

  • Many Grenfell Tower Firefighters Diagnosed with Incurable Cancers

    Many Grenfell Tower Firefighters Diagnosed with Incurable Cancers

    Jan. 16, 2023 Up to a dozen firefighters who responded to the 2017 Grenfell Tower fire have been diagnosed with digestive cancers or leukemia.

    Source Firehouse.com News

    Several firefighters who responded to the deadly 2017 Grenfell Tower fire in London have been diagnosed with terminal cancers.

    Close to a dozen firefighters were diagnosed with digestive cancers or leukaemia, which is the Mirror attributes to the firefighters’ work at the Grenfell fire. Many of the firefighters are in their 40s.

    According to the paper, others are expected to be diagnosed in years to come.

    “We are expecting some really depressing data to be revealed soon. It’s shocking,” a fire department member told the newspaper.

    Firefighters depleted their SCBA breathing air and continued to work, while others wore their soot-covered turnout gear for up to 10 hours as they toiled in the 24-story high rise.

    Officials said 1,300 firefighters responded worked at the Grenfell site.

    In 2019, an investigation found that the soil surrounding the Grenfell site was highly contaminated and could lead to respiratory ailments and cancer. 

    “On a personal level it’s very worrying. I’ve got two young kids and I want to see them grow up,” said firefighter David Badillo, one of the first firefighters on scene.

    “We were quite early on the scene and got held in this underground car park and we were breathing all the toxins for ages,” another firefighter, who did not want to be identified, told the newspaper. He said he now has scarred lungs.

    “This vital research proves that firefighters are suffering and dying from cancer, strokes, heart disease, and mental ill health as a result of going to work and protecting the public,”Fire Brigades Union National Official Riccardo la Torre told The Sun.

    “We now know that firefighters are exposed to health and life-threatening contaminants as a result of their occupation, and certainly would have been at an incident the size and scale of the Grenfell Tower Fire.

    The 24-story tower burned for 60 hours, beginning on on June 14, 2017 and claimed 72 lives. 

  • Street Renamed to Honor Fallen St. Louis Firefighter

    Street Renamed to Honor Fallen St. Louis Firefighter

    Jan. 16, 2023 One year after St. Louis firefighter Benjamin Polson was killed in a house fire, the street outside Engine House 13 was named in his memory.

    Source Firehouse.com News

    St. Louis firefighter Benjamin Polson died in a house fire a year ago, and he was remembered Saturday as the street outside the fire station was named in his honor.  

    A sign outside Engine House 13 now reads “Benjamin Polson Place.”

    “That sign is going to be watching over as the kids continue to play in the street,” former Capt. Larry Conley  told KMOV.com. “Hopefully the legacy continues.”

    “It’s hard to believe it’s been a year,” retired Fire Chief Kenneth Smith said. “It’s been a very difficult year for the St. Louis fire department and especially for the Polson family.”

    Polson, who was 32 at the time, responded from Engine House 13 to a Jan. 12, 2022 house fire.

    As firefighters were exiting the vacant building, it collapsed and trapped Polson. He was removed but later died and another firefighter was seriously injured. 

    “To never forget his courage,” St. Louis Fire Captain Garon Mosby said. “Never forget his sacrifice. To never forget his service. To never forget his love, his zest, his zeal for life, his friends, those he loved.”

  • NY Firefighter Accuses Chief, Captain of Rape

    NY Firefighter Accuses Chief, Captain of Rape

    Jan. 16, 2023 A firefighter medic accused a Wantagh fire chief and captain of rape after a birthday party at a fire station in January 2022.

    Source Firehouse.com News

    A firefighter medic accused a Wantagh fire chief and captain of rape.
    A firefighter medic accused a Wantagh fire chief and captain of rape.

    Two Wantagh fire officers—a captain and a chief—are accused of raping a firefighter medic at a fire station last year.

    According to paperwork, in January 2022, the plaintiff was invited to the captain’s birthday party at a fire station where the chief and captain suggested she have alcoholic drinks. 

    The two commented that she was the captain’s “birthday present,” according to a report by News12.com.

    The alleged rape occurred after party guests left the fire station and it was just the three of them.

    “These were not only her colleagues, but her superiors,” the victim’s attorney, Vess Mitev, told the television station. “I think as many of us knew and try to play it off in the public atmosphere because you don’t want to embarrass yourself and you don’t want to embarrass the person that’s making those comments as well. So, it’s not that she had no idea. It’s that no one had any idea what this night was about to turn into.”

    The chief texted the plaintiff the next day, asking her to keep quiet. 

    Within days, she ended her membership with the Long Island fire department. 

    “The event was truly horrific for her to the point where obviously she had to stop doing one of the two things that she loved the most, which was working in the firehouse and helping people,” Mitev said.

    According to initial paperwork from the department, the words “rape” or “sexual assault” did not appear for two months mid-March 2022.

    The chief and the captain, who refused to take part in the investigation, are no longer with the department so they do not face any departmental charges.

    The Nassau County District Attorney’s Office did not confirm to the television station if they were looking at criminal charges. 

  • Firefighter Charged in Three GA Fires

    Firefighter Charged in Three GA Fires

    Jan. 16, 2023 Calhoun County and state investigators say Arlington firefighter Dontavis George set three structure fires late last year.

    Source The Albany Herald, Ga. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    Jan. 14—ATLANTA — Insurance and Safety Fire Commissioner John F. King has announced that Dontavis George, 20, of Arlington, has been charged with three counts each of arson and criminal trespassing.

    In October of 2022, King’s office was contacted by the Calhoun County Sheriff, Josh Hilton, in reference to a series of fires in Arlington.

    “During October and November, two mobile home fires and one site-built structure fire in Arlington were determined to be incendiary in nature,” the fire commissioner said in a news release. “Working with investigators from the Calhoun County Sheriff’s Office, we developed multiple leads that resulted in a full confession by Mr. George.”

    George was arrested on Jan. 5.

  • Fire Destroys ME Home Built in 1800s

    Fire Destroys ME Home Built in 1800s

    Jan. 16, 2023 Firefighters from Lovell, Saco Valley, Fryeburg, Stoneham and Sweden battled the intense flames that destroyed the historic home.

    By: Steve Sherlock Source: Sun Journal, Lewiston, Maine Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    Jan. 14—LOVELL — A two-story home built in the 1800s was destroyed in a fire Thursday evening.

    Firefighters were called to the home at 506 Christian Hill Road about 6:50 p.m. and found it fully engulfed in flames, Lovell Fire Chief Mark Moulton said. Flames were knocked down by about 8:15 p.m.

    Residents and their dog were out of the home when fire crews arrived. There were no reports of injuries.

    The Office of Maine Fire Marshal is investigating the cause, but Moulton said it did not appear to be suspicious.

    Firefighters from Stoneham, Fryeburg, Sweden and Saco Valley assisted the Lovell Fire Department with personnel and tankers.

  • Five NJ Firefighters Injured in House Explosion

    Five NJ Firefighters Injured in House Explosion

    Jan. 15, 2023 Just seconds after firefighters entered the burning Pompton Lakes home, five firefighters were injured when the home exploded.

    By: Jackie Roman Source: nj.com Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    Two volunteer firefighters were hurt in a house explosion in Pompton Lakes early Saturday morning, borough officials said.

    After spotting smoke coming from a residential area at approximately 2:04 a.m. Saturday, members of Pompton Lakes Fire Department, a volunteer organization in Passaic County, responded to the scene of a house fire in the area of Ramapo Avenue and Riverdale Road, according to a statement posted on the fire department’s Facebook page.

    Crew members had barely entered the home when, “seconds later, the house exploded,” the fire department said.

    “I literally sat down in bed, went to go put my feet up and heard the explosion,” neighbor Shirley Jobes said. “I immediately jumped back up, looked out the window, and I saw pieces of the roof on fire up in the air and falling back down.”

    Five Pompton Lakes firemen were inside the home when the explosion occurred, said Mayor Michael Serra in a statement posted to Facebook.

    Two of the firefighters were sent to St. Barnabas Burn Center for non-life-threatening injuries. The men were treated and later released, the fire department said.

    Three firefighters sustained minor injuries and were treated on scene and released.

    “Everyday our volunteer organizations put their life on the line for Pompton Lakes,” Serra said. “We all appreciate it.”

    The incident is under investigation by the State Fire Marshall and PC CSI, the fire department said.