30
Apr 2010

Poor communication cited in LA firefighter deaths

By ROBERT JABLON, The Associated Press 3:51 PM Friday, April 30, 2010

LOS ANGELES — Poor communication and unexpected fire conditions probably caused the deaths of two firefighters whose truck plunged off a mountain road during last year's huge wildfire in the mountains above Los Angeles, a government report concluded.

Los Angeles County fire Capt. Tedmund Hall and Firefighter Specialist Arnaldo Quinones died on Aug. 30 while setting backfires in a failed attempt to keep walls of flame from overrunning an inmate firefighting camp in Angeles National Forest.

Their truck plunged 800 feet from the dirt road on Mount Gleason, struck a rock and flipped onto its roof.

The county Fire Department report, prepared with assistance of other agencies, suggests that Hall, who was driving, lost consciousness as he drove through the flames in an attempt to avoid being cut off from escape.

They were the only firefighters to die during the 250-square-mile Station Fire that burned 89 foothill and canyon homes as it became the largest wildfire in county history. The fire began in the national forest but eventually involved many firefighting agencies under unified command.

Retraining to make sure firefighters communicate better with commanders is under way, county Fire Chief P. Michael Freeman said Friday.

Armed with detailed weather information and more warning, "we don't think that Ted and Arnie would have been out on that road," Freeman said.

The department also plans to look at its fire camps and determine in advance whether they should be defended or evacuated in the event of a fire instead of leaving the decision to camp supervisors, the chief said.

"Hindsight is always 20/20," he said.

"As firefighters, we always analyze what we've done and we try to learn from it ... this is extremely difficult because we lost two brothers," Freeman said. "Let's do this in their memory so that, hopefully, this never happens again."

The Fire Department report to the county Board of Supervisors on April 22 concluded the deaths of Hall and Quinones might have been prevented had the camp received better warning that changing winds were driving the fire toward Camp 16 with new ferocity.

At the same time, the report praised "cool heads, leadership, split-second decision-making, raw courage and sound execution of orders" for saving 72 other people. Crews fled a burning building and huddled in trucks and under portable shelters as 200-foot-high flames raced through the site. More than a dozen were treated for smoke inhalation, eye injuries and stress.

The 141-page report by county and state investigators said there was a long-standing plan to defend the fire camp and protect crews there, but "something went horribly wrong" because of unexpected conditions.

Camp workers had been watching the fire for two days and thought it would take hours to reach them, the report said.

However, erratic downdrafts drove the fire into a frenzy.

Hall, who was the camp supervisor, and Quinones drove out to set backfires on a road to keep the camp's only evacuation route open, the report said.

A lack of communication with the commanders managing the fire response and the lack of a lookout along the road meant they had no early warning that the fire had moved southeast and cut them off.

They probably worked in 50 mph wind gusts while "smoke would be shading the sun and obscuring local visibility, and the 'freight train' sounds of the approaching fire run would be becoming much louder," the report said.

A firefighter who saw Hall using a flare gun to set backfires radioed him that "you got fire behind you, you got fire below you" and "you got to get out," the report said. He later repeated his warning by yelling at Hall and blowing a whistle, believing Hall understood, the report said.

In a final radio transmission to the camp, Hall urged "keep the road clear," then suddenly swore before the transmission cut off.

___

On the Net:

Fire report: http://www.fire.lacounty.gov/top_story_images/Camp16SAIR.pdf

___

April 30, 2010 07:49 PM EDT

Copyright 2010, The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Filed under  //   California   LODD   Los Angeles   firefighters   line of duty   wildfires  
29
Dec 2009

Police Officer says he's blessed that his badge saved his life - WMC-TV

By Lori Brown - bio | email

OAKLAND, TN (WMC-TV) - This story gives new meaning to the phrase badge of honor. After all, it is a badge that is credited with saving Oakland Police Officer Joshua Smith's life, after a man shot him at point-blank range.

"It felt like someone hit me in the chest with a baseball bat," Smith said, speaking out for the first time since the shooting on Christmas Eve.

"I couldn't breathe, I couldn't catch my breath. At that point I was worried about finding a wound and stopping the bleeding," Smith said.

But there was no wound, and there was no bleeding, thanks to his steel badge. Officer Smith says it all started at one in the morning Christmas Eve when he spotted a car weaving wildly on Highway 64 in Oakland.

He pulled the car with an expired temporary tag over and ordered the driver to get out for a field sobriety test. The passenger also got out, and swung a knife at Smith. As Smith subdued the passenger, the driver pulled a gun out and shot Smith at point-blank range.

"As soon as the shot happened and I fell back, I was thinking, defend, defend, defend," Smith said.

Smith fired back, the driver screamed, and they took off.

Smith says doctors told him, without his badge, the wound to his chest could have killed him.

"It could have been where my family was making funeral preparations instead of my kids opening gifts with their dad and my wife."

Before the shooting, Smith says he didn't even like the badges which he considered bulky.

"{I said, they} weigh the collar down....It wasn't really just complaining, it was a complaining statement."

Smith says he got everything he wanted for Christmas.

"My life and my family. Yeah, I got everything I needed. Everything I wanted."

The company that made the badges heard about what happened. They're going to put it in a nice box and give it to Officer Smith, so he can keep it. They do plan to give him another badge.

Copyright 2009 WMC-TV. All rights reserved

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I got this one from Silas Scarborough from his Facebook posts.

Filed under  //   above and beyond   badge   danger   line of duty   police   police department