Category: In The News

  • Suit Filed by CA Firefighter, Former Marine, Claims Sexual Abuse, Racism

    Suit Filed by CA Firefighter, Former Marine, Claims Sexual Abuse, Racism

    Feb. 23, 2023 Casilia Loessberg’s suit calls what she was subjected to at the San Jose Fire Department “horrific and unlawful.”

    By Ethan Baron Source Bay Area News Group (TNS) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    San Jose firefighters battle a recent blaze.
    San Jose firefighters battle a recent blaze.

    Casilia Loessberg dreamed of becoming a firefighter. After seven years in the U.S. Marines, she turned her dream to reality when she joined the San Jose Fire Department — but sexual abuse, racism and anti-Semitism drove her out, she claims in a lawsuit filed this week.

    Loessberg joined the San Jose Fire Department in 2015, according to the suit filed Wednesday against the City of San Jose.

    “What happened next was horrific and unlawful,” the suit in Santa Clara County Superior Court alleges. “For the next six years, Casilia was sexually assaulted, harassed, discriminated against, and humiliated, by the very firefighters with whom she worked.”

    San Jose City Attorney Nora Frimann said she had not seen the lawsuit or Loessberg’s claims, and that her office doesn’t comment on pending litigation.

    When Loessberg started in the San Jose Fire Department, women made up less than 4% of career U.S. firefighters, according to the federal government’s U.S. Fire Administration, which reported that female firefighters repeatedly describe discrimination and harassment as key barriers to having more women in firefighting. A 2020 Santa Clara County civil grand jury report said only 4% of firefighters in the county were women because of gender bias, insufficient female recruitment and a “lack of inclusivity,” and that San Jose’s department had only 2% women.

    The City of San Jose has paid out more than $1 million in a judgment and settlements to female firefighters in lawsuits involving gender-based retaliation, discrimination, and harassment, the grand jury found. A City of San Jose response to the grand jury report said the number of female firefighters in its department plummeted from a peak of 43 in 2010 to 17 in 2020. In October, a bikini-clad woman was seen on video stepping out of a San Jose Fire Department engine truck and into The Pink Poodle strip club, and GPS data revealed the engine later stopped outside a San Jose bikini bar.

    During Loessberg’s probation, a supervisor insinuated that she was unable to do her job because she was a woman, then pinned her against a fire truck with his body, reached inside her pants and groped her buttocks, Loessberg claims. The man rubbed his crotch against her and whispered in her ear, she alleges. A “shocked” male co-worker who witnessed the purported incident said nothing, Loessberg claims. Because the man outranked her, and she had to “live with her fellow firefighters and rely on each other during life-or-death situations,” she did not report the incident to higher-ups, according to her suit.

    The supervisor also made other “unwelcome advances” to her, and she learned he had “allegedly assaulted a female paramedic who worked for a Santa Clara County ambulance company,” the suit claims. Her pleas to superiors to keep her from assignments to the man’s location “were met with apathy” and she used personal time off to avoid working alongside him, she alleges.

    In 2017, Loessberg became the first woman firefighter at San Jose’s Station 3, considered to be a “rough and tough” location nicknamed “the cowboy station,” according to the suit. There, a supervisor began sending her nude photos of women who looked like her, with messages saying “thinking of you” and “this reminds me of you,” her suit claims. One photo showed a frontal view of a woman standing with one leg against a wall, her genitals and breasts exposed, Loessberg alleges. In harassment that went on for months, the man, married with children, regularly subjected Loessberg to comments such as, “You smell really, really good,” her suit claims. Because the man was closely related to a chief in the department, she feared for her safety, and possible retaliation for reporting his behavior, she alleges.

    Also at that station was a “known Nazi sympathizer” and racist, who would “regularly and openly make racist and anti-Semitic remarks, including continual use of the ‘N’ word, statements about genocide of the Jewish people, and his support of the Nazi party,” Loessberg claims. The man drew swastikas in the firehouse kitchen, and a fire captain who saw the images told him to “calm down” but imposed no discipline, her suit alleges. When the man asked Loessberg if she was Jewish she told him she believed she was German, and he insisted that because of her last name she must be Jewish, and said, “Jews should all be put into the ovens,” she claims in the suit.

    At least three times, the man told her she would have to pay the “coal toll,” which she understood to be a reference to being Black, she alleges. That man, too, made an “unwelcome” and “sexually laden” invitation for Loessberg to come to his home, when his wife and children were absent, her suit claims.

    In late 2021, during a training session outside Sacramento, another supervisor texted her to invite her to shower in his room, she claims. She reported the message to her direct supervisor, who reported it to a battalion chief, who interviewed Loessberg and told her a deputy chief was trying to “squash this,” her suit alleges.

    Loessberg claims it was her participation in extensive anti-sexual-harassment training in late 2021 that empowered her to “fully fight the mistreatment she was enduring.” After a video-meeting with a human-resources representative, Loessberg was interviewed three times between December 2021 and November 2022 by representatives of the City of San Jose, according to her suit.

    She claims she was “constructively discharged” from her employment as a firefighter, a legal term describing when a person leaves a job because of intolerable working conditions. Loessberg, who had aspired to work her way up the ladder to become a battalion chief, “was given the unfathomable choice of leaving her chosen career or, alternatively, being forced to put herself at risk, work with her abusers, and continue to suffer the consequences,” her suit alleges.

    She claims the alleged abuse, and the City of San Jose’s purported failure to stop it, caused her to suffer “extreme emotional distress and severe trauma,” and that her reputation in the firefighting community and her future employment prospects have been damaged. She is seeking unspecified damages, and compensation for lost wages.

  • Parents, Daughter Killed in NY House Fire

    Parents, Daughter Killed in NY House Fire

    Feb. 23, 2023 Monroe Joint Fire District firefighters were initially driven back by heavy fire.

    Source firehouse.com News

    A house fire in Monroe, NY claimed the lives of a couple and little girl early Thursday.

    “Without the fire being knocked down a little bit, you can’t make entry. We knocked it down pretty quick, within 15 minutes,”  Jonathan Dolch of the Monroe Joint Fire District told CBS2 reporters. 

    Neighbors identified the family as Sarah and Kalman Goldstein and their daughter, Miriam.

    Roxanna Lopez called 9-1-1 after hearing a loud boom. “It was only a little flame when it started, and then in a matter of seconds, by the time I got outside my house, it was already all over the porch. It was really bad.” 

    The family moved up from the city not long ago and was active with the Chabad of Orange County, neighbors told reporters.  

    The cause of the fire remains under investigation. 

  • Update: MI Chief Fondly Remembers FF Killed by Power Line

    Update: MI Chief Fondly Remembers FF Killed by Power Line

    Feb. 23, 2023 Paw Paw Chief Jim DeGroff IV said Lt. Ethan Quillen “volunteered his time here for free, gave his life for free…”

    Source Firehouse.com News

    An emotional Paw Paw Fire Chief Jim DeGroff IV spoke fondly of his lieutenant who was killed Wednesday night when he came into contact with a downed line.

    Lt. Ethan Quillen’s gear was on display as the chief and Michigan State Police Special Lt. DuWayne Robinson spoke to the media outside the firehouse.

    Robinson said the state police are investigating the accidental death at the request of the fire department, according to MLive.

    Through tears, DeGroff described his friend: “A great guy, father, husband, volunteered his time here for free, gave his life for free…” 

    The chief continued: “The men and women that serve in this fire department, they love their community. We’re so fortunate to have the people we have. They don’t want anything in return. Their satisfaction is helping another family and helping anywhere we can. We don’t want pay. We don’t want press. We don’t look for that.”

    He explained that the original downed power line was being handled when a tree broke and took down a live line. “The line snaked and there was no way to get away from it… Nothing that any human did or (Quillen) did was wrong.”

    “Ethan was the example of the Paw Paw Volunteer Fire Department. He earned his rank as a lieutenant and this scar is not going to ever go away.”

    Volunteers are still handling calls, and neighboring departments also are lending a hand. 

    “The citizens of Paw Paw and the townships we serve are still protected, just with a heavy heart.”

  • Murder Trial to Finally Start in 2017 TX LODD Blaze

    Murder Trial to Finally Start in 2017 TX LODD Blaze

    Feb. 23, 2023 San Antonio Firefighter Scott Deem was fighting an intentionally set fire in a strip mall when he died.

    By Emilie Eaton Source San Antonio Express-News (TNS) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    Firefighter Scott Deem
    Firefighter Scott Deem

    Feb. 22—The man accused of intentionally setting a shopping center ablaze in 2017, which caused the death of San Antonio firefighter Scott Deem, is expected to go to trial this year.

    The case against Emond Johnson, 44, has been tied up in pretrial proceedings for nearly six years. He faces charges of murder and arson resulting in death.

    Johnson appeared in court Wednesday for a hearing to determine when the trial could begin. One of his attorneys, J. Charles Bunk, suggested Sept. 18 or Oct. 10. Prosecutors said they needed to talk with witnesses to know if those dates worked for them.

    Investigators say Johnson was behind on lease payments on his gym in Ingram Square, a shopping mall on the Northwest Side, and had other debts, prompting him to set the building on fire on May 18, 2017.

    Deem, 31, was killed trying to extinguish the blaze.

    The delay in going to trial was lengthened by the COVID-19 pandemic, which slowed the courts and postponed even high-profile criminal cases. Before the pandemic, Johnson’s attorneys attempted to have the trial moved, arguing that extensive publicity had made a fair trial impossible in Bexar County. A judge denied that motion in 2019.

    During Wednesday’s hearing, prosecutors said they had already turned over all evidence to Johnson’s defense attorneys. Bunk said seven months would be an adequate amount of time to review all the material and prepare Johnson’s defense.

    State District Judge Kristina Escalona asked Johnson at the end of the hearing if he understood what was going on.

    “Yes ma’am,” he responded.

    Escalona said attorneys and court personnel were doing “everything we can to get you to trial.”

    Another hearing is scheduled for March 22, at which time attorneys and prosecutors will finalize the trial schedule and dates to hear pretrial motions.

    Escalona said she expects the trial will take five weeks.

  • MI Firefighter Killed by Downed Power Line

    MI Firefighter Killed by Downed Power Line

    Feb. 23, 2023 The Paw Paw firefighter was electrocuted by a line brought down by ice and freezing rain.

    By John Tunison Source mlive.com (TNS) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    VAN BUREN COUNTY, MI — A Paw Paw firefighter died after coming into contact with a downed power line, state police said.

    Firefighters across West Michigan responded to dozens of calls Wednesday of downed power lines and trees caused by freezing rain and ice.

    In Van Buren County, firefighters were in the 42000 block of 30th Street, in Almena Township, when a firefighter was injured about 6:10 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 22.

    Other details surrounding the incident were not immediately available.

  • CA Firefighter Dies During Rescue Training Exercise

    CA Firefighter Dies During Rescue Training Exercise

    Feb. 23, 2023 Santa Cruz County Recruit Daniel Lamothe, 38, is the county’s first volunteer line-of-duty death, officials said.

    By PK Hattis Source Santa Cruz Sentinel, Calif. (TNS) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    Feb. 21—BEN LOMOND — A volunteer recruit with the Santa Cruz County Fire Department died Sunday during a weekend training exercise, county officials said Tuesday.

    According to a county release, Daniel Lamothe, 38, of Santa Cruz, became “medically distressed” during a joint firefighter academy training session at the Ben Lomond Training Center. He was given immediate medical assistance from personnel at the scene of the training but revival efforts were unsuccessful.

    “We mourn the passing of one of our brethren,” County Fire Chief Nate Armstrong said in the release. “Daniel wanted to be a firefighter so that he could give back to the community where he was raised and in which he lived. His commitment to public service serves as a model for us all. We grieve along with his friends and family for this sudden and tragic loss.”

    Armstrong told the Sentinel that Lamothe was participating in a rescue training exercise considered “moderately strenuous” at the time of his collapse. As of Tuesday, autopsy efforts were underway to confirm the cause of death.

    Santa Cruz County contracts with Cal Fire to provide fire prevention and emergency medical services for unincorporated regions of the county. Armstrong, the fire chief for Cal Fire’s San Mateo-Santa Cruz Unit, also holds the title of Santa Cruz County fire chief.

    County Fire includes five volunteer fire companies that provide fire protection and emergency response services for the region. According to Armstrong, the county currently has 68 active volunteer firefighters and it has never had a volunteer fatality during a training exercise or while responding to an emergency.

  • Man Uses Tied Bedsheets to Help People Escape PA Hotel Fire

    Man Uses Tied Bedsheets to Help People Escape PA Hotel Fire

    Feb. 23, 2023 Intercourse Fire Chief Steve Dienner said two people were taken to a hospital.

    By Jenna Wise Source pennlive.com (TNS) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    Three people, including a firefighter, were injured in the course of an overnight Thursday fire at the AmishView Inn & Suites in Lancaster County, according to reports.

    The fire began around 2:40 a.m. on the 3100 block of the Philadelphia Pike in Leacock Township.

    Steve Dienner, chief of Intercourse Fire Co., told FOX 43 two people were taken to a hospital. A firefighter was treated for minor injuries.

    The blaze reportedly started in a hotel vending/ice machine. Fire officials do not have an estimate on how long the AmishView will be closed, according to FOX 43.

    A man staying at the AmishView tied bed sheets together to help rescue other guests, according to WGAL.

    “Me and my mom rushed out. But my dad stayed and helped other people. My dad got rescued by a ladder, but like, he saved two people,” Mateo Caceres said, according to WGAL. “Since the fire was out there, he had to tie bed sheets to get people down the thing.”

    Displaced guests are reportedly staying at the Bird-in-Hand Family Inn while the situation is resolved. AmishView manager Tom Neely told WGAL about 60% of their rooms were occupied at the time of the fire.

  • FDNY Proposes 54 Percent Hike for Basic Ambulance Service

    FDNY Proposes 54 Percent Hike for Basic Ambulance Service

    Feb. 23, 2023 The cost of basic life support ambulance service through the city’s 9-1-1 system would rise from $900 to $1,385.

    By Chris Sommerfeldt, Leonard Greene Source New York Daily News (TNS) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    Patients and the companies that insure them would have to pay more for rides in FDNY ambulances under a rate hike proposed to offset the cost of inflation and salary increases for emergency medical technicians and paramedics, fire officials said.

    Under a proposal published Tuesday by the FDNY, the cost of basic life support ambulance service through the city’s 911 system would rise from $900 to $1,385, a 54% increase.

    The proposed fee schedule also calls for an additional charge of $20 per mile traveled, up from $15 per mile.

    “The charges for ambulance service were last increased two years ago, in January 2021,” the department said in a notice announcing a public hearing on the rate hike.

    “The proposed rates in part reflect increases (including recent EMS collective bargaining increases and inflation) in personal services costs and other than personal services costs required to provide emergency ambulance service. The proposed rate increases have been calculated to reduce the portion of such costs that is currently borne by city taxpayers.”

    The cost of providing oxygen will remain the same at $66.

    The last rate hike was delayed because of the COVID 19 pandemic.

    An FDNY spokeswoman said increases are expected to take effect this spring and would result in a $4 million revenue boost for the city for this fiscal year, and a $16.3 million revenue bump for next fiscal year.

    The FDNY has scheduled an online public hearing on the issue for March 24.

    But Bronx City Councilman Oswald Feliz, who is a member of the Council’s Fire and Emergency Management Committee, doesn’t need that long to weigh in on the proposal.

    “I’m definitely concerned about how this can affect low-income families who might need these services for medical emergencies,” said Feliz, who represents one of the city’s poorest districts.

  • PA Department Getting Ready to Provide Ambulance Service

    PA Department Getting Ready to Provide Ambulance Service

    Feb. 23, 2023 Two ambulances are now part of Meadville Central Fire Department’s fleet.

    By Mike Crowley Source The Meadville Tribune, Pa. (TNS) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    Feb. 23—Meadville’s plan to begin operating its own ambulances could go into effect as early as April, city officials said Wednesday. Legal requirements will take six weeks or more to fulfill before emergency medical services (EMS) can begin, but Meadville Central Fire Department is ready to roll in one important respect: Two used ambulances have been added to its fleet of vehicles.

    A coordinator to manage the ambulances and the paramedics that staff them has also been added: Evan Kardosh, the former city firefighter who led the push to add ambulance services to Meadville Central’s responsibilities, started as the city’s first EMS coordinator a week ago.

    “It’s getting very real,” Kardosh said in a phone interview Wednesday. “It’s a very exciting time — exciting and stressful — but knowing what it’s going to bring and what it’s going to allow, for really all of the EMS in this area as a whole to hopefully improve the care, is something that we’re really excited about.”

    The next step in the process is Meadville City Council’s consideration of an ordinance that will designate Meadville Central Fire Department as the city’s primary EMS provider. The ordinance will likely be on council’s agenda next month, possibly as early as March 1, City Manager Maryann Menanno said during a council study session Wednesday.

    How soon council sees the ordinance depends on how long it takes the city’s attorney to review a draft of the proposal, according to Menanno. Approval of the ordinance requires three votes over the course of two meetings. Assuming all three votes go in favor of the ordinance and council follows past practice, it would take effect 21 days after the third vote. If the process starts March 1, the ordinance would take effect April 5.

    In the meantime, Kardosh will begin working on upgrading the fire department’s state licensing to allow it to transport patients. The department has also begun receiving applications for three full-time paramedic positions that were first advertised Monday, he said.

    Staffing changes have already begun, according to Menanno. With Kardosh’s move from firefighter to EMS coordinator, one of the department’s three part-time firefighters moved to full time to fill the vacancy. Three additional part-time firefighters have been hired over the past month as well, she said.

    The EMS coordinator position comes with an annual salary of $58,150 plus benefits, Menanno said. The newly created position will fall among the city’s non-represented positions, which also include city manager and city clerk, so the employee in the position will not be a member of International Association of Fire Fighters Local 515, the union chapter that represents Meadville Central firefighters. Kardosh had served as president of the local for several years until being succeeded by firefighter Tyler Cochran.

    Like the EMS coordinator, the new paramedics being hired won’t be in the firefighters’ union either, according to Menanno. Compensation for the positions will include a starting annual salary of $48,082 plus benefits.

    The two ambulances purchased this month consist of a 2008 Ford Wheeled Coach, expected to serve as the primary EMS vehicle, and a 2002 Freightliner American LaFrance, Kardosh said.

    Having two ambulances will help prevent a “gap in care for city residents,” he said. With several of the department’s firefighting staff qualified as paramedics, he added, “we can jump o the other ambulance if need be” when the primary ambulance is on a call.

    The 2008 Ford was purchased from Ronkonkoma Fire Department in Lake Ronkonkoma, New York, for $40,000. The latter was acquired closer to home and, in fact, was familiar to Kardosh — it was sold to the city of Meadville for $18,500 by Fellows Club Volunteer Fire Department in Conneautville, where Kardosh began his career as a volunteer nearly 15 years ago.

    “We got very lucky finding these two units that will be able to serve our community for years to come,” he said.

    As work to establish Meadville Central’s EMS services continues, the transition between the city’s current primary EMS provider — Meadville Area Ambulance Service (MAAS) — and the fire department will need to be worked out as well. At this point, it’s not clear what that process looks like, according to MAAS owner Eric Henry.

    “No one has reached out to me, so I have no idea,” Henry said in a phone interview Wednesday. “I have not heard any transition plan.”

    Likewise, it’s not clear what happens for city residents who have paid for subscription memberships with MAAS. The company offers subscriptions ranging from $40 per year for an individual senior to $65 per year for a family, according to its website.

    “I have no idea,” Henry said regarding the impact the change will have on MAAS subscription members. “I’ve asked to have people reach out to me, but no one has.”

    Kardosh said plans to discuss the transition with various stakeholders are in the works.

    “We will be working in coming weeks with other agencies and ( Crawford County) 911 about how to make sure that transition is flawless,” he said, “and get all parties involved to make sure we are making the transition as effortless as we can for everyone, make sure that there are no gaps anywhere that we need, and to make sure that the appropriate ambulance is dispatched when it’s needed.”

  • FDNY Firefighters Subdue Man Who Broke into Fire Station

    FDNY Firefighters Subdue Man Who Broke into Fire Station

    Feb. 22, 2023 He was confronted while taking firefighters’ property from the bunkroom.

    By Thomas Tracy Source New York Daily News (TNS) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    An armed robber climbed through a Midtown Manhattan FDNY firehouse’s second-floor window and fought with two of the city’s Bravest, the Daily News has learned.

    Cops were called to Engine Company 26 on W. 37th St. near Seventh Ave. about 9:40 p.m. Tuesday after Michael Nahaczewski was spotted climbing the side of the firehouse and entering the second-floor window, cops said.

    He was removing personal items from the firefighter’s sleeping areas when smoke eaters returned from a call and spotted Nahaczewski rummaging through their things, cops said.

    “(Nahaczewski) was on the second floor of the firehouse and was in possession of personal property of the firefighters on duty,” an FDNY spokesman said.

    Firefighters from Engine 26 — nicknamed “The Batcave” for the iconic bat symbol painted on the sidewalk outside the station — immediately called police and grabbed Nahaczewski, sparking a brief brawl.

    Two firefighter suffered minor injuries in the clash but managed to subdue Nahaczewski ahead of cops arriving, police and FDNY officials said.

    Cops recovered a gun from the suspect.

    Nahaczewski, who cops say lives in the West Village, was charged with attempted assault, petty larceny, possession of a firearm, disorderly conduct, criminal possession of stolen property and criminal possession of a controlled substance.

    His arraignment in Manhattan Criminal Court was pending Wednesday.