Oslo police detain man over fire that killed 6

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Posted on 18th March 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 3/18/2009

OSLO (AP) — Norwegian police say they have detained a man on suspicion of arson in an apartment building fire late last year that killed six people and injured 12 in Oslo.

The fire ripped through the five-story apartment building Dec. 13, and some residents had to be rescued from the roof with ladders. Police detained the man Wednesday but they declined to identify him other than to say he was Norwegian and in his 40s.

Police say the man was charged in connection with a series of fires, including the one in December. But authorities refused to go into detail because the investigation is continuing.

Police say they will seek a court order to keep him in custody.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
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Investigator: Teen admitted setting 9 Pa. fires

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Posted on 13th March 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 3/13/2009

WEST CHESTER, Pa. (AP) — An investigator says a teenager accused of setting nine fires in an arson-plagued Philadelphia suburb led them to several of the scenes and confessed to the crimes.

Nineteen-year-old Roger Leon Barlow was held for trial after a court hearing Friday. He’s charged with arson and aggravated assault in connection with blazes that broke out in Coatesville between Jan. 2 and Feb. 3.

Federal investigator Jason Wick testified in court that Barlow changed his story several times during an interview, but ultimately admitted setting the fires.

Wick also says Barlow drove him and other investigators to the arson sites and referred to one fire that damaged 15 row houses as “the big one.”

A trial date for Barlow has not been set.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
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Police arrest student suspect in Ohio campus fires

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Posted on 6th March 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 3/6/2009

CINCINNATI (AP) — Police say a student at a small Ohio college has been arrested on arson charges after several fires were set on the campus.

Police in the Cincinnati suburb of Delhi Township say 18-year-old Jordan Cullen was arrested Friday and charged with two counts of aggravated arson. It was not immediately clear whether Cullen had an attorney.

Authorities say Cullen set at least one of five small fires Thursday in two buildings at the College of Mount St. Joseph. She is a resident at the liberal arts college of 2,300 students.

The fires prompted evacuations on the campus. Officials report one person died, but the cause of death has not been determined.

___

Information from: The Cincinnati Enquirer, http://www.enquirer.com

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
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Teen arrested in 7 arsons in fire-ravaged Pa. town

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Posted on 19th February 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 2/19/2009


COATESVILLE, Pa. (AP) — A 19-year-old was charged Thursday with setting at least seven fires in an arson-plagued steel town, including a block-long blaze that displaced dozens of people last month.

Roger Leon Barlow Jr., of nearby Downingtown, was charged with arson, aggravated assault and related counts. He was arraigned Thursday afternoon and his bail was set at $9 million.

Staff at the Downingtown district court where Barlow was arraigned said he did not have an attorney.

Barlow is a pyromaniac who liked to watch things burn, Chester County District Attorney Joseph Carroll told The Associated Press.

Coatesville, about 35 miles west of Philadelphia, has tallied 18 arsons this year and 26 last year, one of them fatal. Residents have said they are scared to go to bed at night for fear another fire will break out.

With a suspect under arrest, Carroll said residents should be able to sleep easier, “although I’m not convinced this is the only person involved.”

Carroll said Barlow set a fire late last month that tore through 15 row homes on a single block, displacing dozens of residents and causing an estimated $1.2 million in damage.

In December, authorities arrested three people believed to have been responsible for some of the arsons, including the early December blaze that killed an 83-year-old woman, but the fires continued.

Officials plan to release more details at a news conference later Thursday.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
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Suspect charged in deadly Australian fire

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Posted on 13th February 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 2/13/2009

By TANALEE SMITH
Associated Press Writer

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Authorities charged a man Friday with lighting one of the wildfires that killed more than 180 people in Australia, and whisked him into protective custody to guard him from public fury.

Police said the suspect was charged with one count of arson causing death and intentionally lighting a wildfire near the town of Churchill that killed at least 21 people. It was one of hundreds of fires that raged through southeastern Victoria state Feb. 7, leaving 7,000 people homeless and razing entire towns.

The suspect also was charged with possessing child pornography.

The disaster’s official death toll is 181, but efforts to find and identify victims were continuing and officials expected the final tally to exceed 200. More than 1,800 homes and 1,500 square miles (3,900 square kilometers) of forests and farms were burned.

The suspect’s identity was being kept secret for his own safety, Victoria Police Assistant Commissioner Dannye Moloney told a news conference. He was brought to the state capital of Melbourne from Morwell, 75 miles (120 kilometers) to the east and near the town of Churchill.

“We have a very emotive environment out there,” Moloney said. “If we left a person there it would only be a situation where the people may go to where they believe him to be held and I don’t think they need the trauma.”

Australian Broadcasting Corp. reported from Morwell that the suspect was formally charged in the town’s magistrate’s court, but that he did not appear. He was ordered to be held in custody and to undergo psychiatric evaluation, the broadcaster said.

Police said in a statement that Magistrate Clive Allsop banned publication of any details or photographs of the man that could identify him. Another court hearing was scheduled for Monday.

If found guilty, the man faces a maximum penalty of 25 years in prison for the deadly arson charge, and a maximum of 15 years on the second arson charge.

Police have said they believe foul play was the cause of at least two of the deadly blazes, including the Churchill fire. Those suspicions disgusted the country and prompted Prime Minister Kevin Rudd to describe the fires as possible mass murder.

Verbal abuse was hurled at a van seen leaving the courthouse in Morwell that people apparently believed the suspect was in, Australian Associated Press reported.

“If this person is not insane, then I think he should be in jail for a very long time,” said Gavin Wigginton, whose home was destroyed in the Churchill fire. “If he’s culpable, if he’s all there, he must have known that this was going to kill people and that clearly is murder.”

Ruth Halyburton, whose home in the town of Marysville was burned to the ground, said she could not comprehend why anyone would want to light wildfires.

“Words can’t describe how I feel about them,” Halyburton told The Associated Press at a relief center in nearby Alexandra. “I’m a Christian, but I don’t think to kindly of people if they go light a match and destroy people’s property and lives. They don’t have a brain in their head.”

But experts say arson can be very hard to prove. Physical evidence usually goes up in smoke or is taken away by arsonists, said Thomas Fee, a former president of the Maryland-based International Association of Arson Investigators in the U.S.

Even more difficult to prove is murder by arson. Wildfires often join one another, making it tough to link a fire set by an arsonist with the blaze that eventually kills people, said Damon Muller, who has researched arsonists for the Australian Institute of Criminology.

Marysville, a town of some 500 people, was almost completely destroyed Saturday by one of the fires — but not the Churchill blaze.

Firefighters still struggled to contain about a dozen blazes and one of them flared up Friday and menaced the town of Healesville, coming within less than a mile (1 kilometer) and sending embers dropping like rain over houses.

The threat was downgraded after a few hours, but it served as a reminder that the disaster may not be over yet.

“You can’t see anything. All you can see is smoke, and you can’t even see where the fire is actually coming from,” plant nursery owner John Stanhope told ABC radio from Healesville during the flare-up. “It’s just thick smoke everywhere and everyone is just very much on edge.”

Firefighters raced to take advantage of cooler weather, rain and lighter winds and lit controlled burns Friday in efforts to prevent further breakouts.

The catastrophe’s scale became clearer Friday. Officials raised the tally of destroyed homes by 762 to 1,831, and the number of people left homeless or who fled their homes and have not returned was raised by 2,000 to 7,000.

Officials said the nation had pledged more than 75 million Australian dollars ($50 million) in donations to various charities for survivors. Rudd ordered military bases to be opened to house some of the homeless.

The disaster increased the urgency for a nationwide fire warning system, which has been snarled for years in bickering between state and federal officials.

“I am determined to see this thing implemented across the nation,” Rudd said late Thursday. “If it means cracking heads to ensure it happens we’ll do that.”

Officials partly blamed the dramatic death toll on the number of people who appeared to have waited until they saw the fast-moving blazes coming before trying to flee. Many bodies were found in burned-out cars.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
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Trial begins for man accused in deadly Calif. fire

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Posted on 23rd January 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 1/23/2009

By GREG RISLING
Associated Press Writer

RIVERSIDE, Calif. (AP) — A prosecutor said Thursday that an auto mechanic was “a man bent on destruction” who ignited a wildfire that killed five U.S. Forest Service firefighters in 2006.

In opening statements for Raymond Lee Oyler’s murder trial, Riverside County Deputy District Attorney Michael Hestrin told jurors that Oyler was a serial arsonist who set 25 blazes, including the Esperanza fire, and sometimes as many as three a day during 2006.

Hestrin said Oyler was “a man bent on destruction … a man wanting to be so important, he unleashed disaster on five men.”

Oyler, 38, has pleaded not guilty to 45 counts including murder and arson. He claimed he had been watching his 7-month-old child at home and then went to a casino when the Esperanza fire began on Oct. 26, 2006, as fierce Santa Ana winds roared through Southern California.

If convicted, he faces the death penalty.

The firefighters were overrun by a fierce fire as they defended a home in Twin Pines, a remote and rugged area about 90 miles east of Los Angeles. The fire destroyed 34 homes and 20 outbuildings, and charred more than 67 square miles.

Prosecutors said at most of the sites where fires were set, authorities found wooden matches bundled around or laid over a cigarette. The lit cigarette was a “timing device,” allowing an average of 10 minutes before the matches would be sparked, Hestrin said.

He added Oyler also was tied to two fires through DNA evidence found where the blazes started.

Hestrin said that during one of the fires Oyler is suspected of starting, a camera recorded the defendant’s car coming into and leaving the area. Investigators searching the vehicle found a wig, clothing and a slingshot that appeared to have burn marks on it, Hestrin said.

Fire officials had set up hidden cameras at several sites where they believed fires might erupt.

Defense attorney Mark McDonald said in his opening statements that the prosecution had neither DNA evidence nor witnesses to connect Oyler to the Esperanza fire.

“You will only hear theories,” McDonald said. “This may be just hopefulness that someone will be held accountable for Esperanza.”

The attorney said he would call an arson expert to testify that more than one person was likely responsible for setting the fires because different types of incendiary devices were used.

“They are not in compliance … with someone we would call a serial arsonist,” McDonald told jurors.

McDonald has been fighting to admit into evidence that a Forest Service investigation found another possible arsonist — a firefighter who worked in the area when the suspicious fires started.

Firefighters Jason McKay, 27; Jess McLean, 27; Daniel Hoover-Najera, 20; Mark Loutzenhiser, 43; and Pablo Cerda, 23, died in the fire.

The trial court was scheduled to hold a motions hearing Friday, and testimony was expected to resume Monday.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
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