Firefighters honored; murder case heats up


LOS ANGELES (AP) — Investigators worked round-the-clock Friday at a charred hillside as they sought to build a murder case stemming from a huge wildfire that claimed the lives of two firefighters.

Authorities blocked access to the crime scene, a scorched area of scrub and trees off the side of the Angeles Crest Highway, as they analyzed clues including incendiary material reported to have been found there. Authorities say the fire was arson but are still trying to find a culprit and understand how it was set.

“We are going to find out what we can and present it to the D.A.,” said Los Angeles County sheriff’s Lt. Liam Gallagher, who is heading the homicide probe and whose investigators worked through the night into Friday. “We are considering it a murder investigation.”

Gallagher said as many as 14 investigators would be on hand to help with the probe over the weekend.

“We are in the early stages, just beginning to put things together,” he said. “Firefighters losing their lives in the line of duty is an added incentive, but we work every case to the fullest.”

Arson investigators have plenty of experience to draw upon as they try to figure out who ignited a fire that torched more than 230-square-miles of the Angeles National Forest on the edge of Los Angeles and burned more than 60 homes.

Most wildfires are caused by human activity, and government statistics show that people were faulted for 5,208 wildfires in Southern California in 2008, the highest number since at least 2001. Between 2006 and 2008, Southern California was the only region of the country to see a significant jump in the number of wildfires blamed on people.

Still, very few of the forest fires lead to criminal or civil cases. The U.S. Forest Service recorded nearly 400 arson wildfires since 2005, records show.

Firefighters paused in their battle against the fire Friday to pay their respects to two fallen comrades whose deaths have triggered the investigation.

Hundreds of weary firefighters who have slogged on the front lines for the past 11 days took off their caps and helmets and bowed their heads at a tribute for Capt. Tedmund Hall and Specialist Arnaldo Quinones before dawn at the command center in the foothills near the flames.

The men helped save about 60 members of an inmate fire crew Sunday as flames approached their camp by setting a backfire that allowed the group to get to safety, said Los Angeles County Fire Capt. Glenn Goulet. The pair died when their truck plunged 800 feet down a steep mountain road.

The blaze was 42 percent surrounded Friday, authorities said.

Investigators will pick through clues at the scene, try to establish a likely motive for the arsonist, then predict the characteristics and traits of the unknown offender as they look to make an arrest.