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- <text id=93TT0521>
- <title>
- Nov. 15, 1993: Clues In The Ashes
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 15, 1993 A Christian In Winter:Billy Graham
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CALIFORNIA, Page 58
- Clues In The Ashes
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Fighting the flames is tough, but not as difficult as hunting
- down and arresting the culprits behind the destruction
- </p>
- <p>By DAVID VAN BIEMA--Reported by Elaine Lafferty/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> The center of town had barely been saved; the remains of Sean
- Penn's $4 million home were not yet cool; 75-ft. flames were
- still roaring through the canyon when Ron Ablott's men hit the
- charred hills above Malibu. Crawling on their hands and knees,
- occasionally slipping a minuscule piece of ash into a plastic
- bag, they obviously belonged there. But unlike thousands of
- public employees battling the conflagration below, they were
- not concerned with fighting fires, at least not any burning
- currently. They were engaged in a manhunt.
- </p>
- <p> From as early as the second day of the fires that have blackened
- 200,000 acres of Southern California and rendered thousands
- homeless, it was obvious that some were not accidental. Aside
- from one blaze caused by a vagrant's campfire and a few others
- sparked by fallen power lines or kids playing with matches,
- everything else was labeled suspicious. But it was not until
- the smoke, literally, cleared over last week's ruins that police
- released a shocking estimate. Of the fortnight's 26 major blazes,
- 20 are regarded as set by arsonists.
- </p>
- <p> What causes a human being to light fire to the dwellings, hopes
- and dreams of his fellows? According to Ken Fineman, associate
- clinical professor of medical psychology at the University of
- California at Irvine, who advises the Orange County fire department,
- 60% of arsonists fall into a "curiosity" subgroup including
- children or teenagers. Of the remaining 40%, some burn down
- buildings in retaliation for what they perceive as injustice;
- others are sexually excited by fires and may travel with police-band
- radios to catch the latest action. Few, according to Fineman,
- want to harm people. Arsonists usually go out of their way to
- target unoccupied homes or areas. "But the fires we're seeing
- here--wild-land fire setters--are much more dangerous. It
- really is a separate category," says Fineman. "The fire setters
- are doing something with pure malice and intent."
- </p>
- <p> "If I get no satisfaction by the time we get a real good volatile
- fire season you'll really regret it...They burned me now
- I'm going to burn back. I fight fire with fire. You like my
- puns chumps? Sizzle Sizzle. You think the Oakland fire was big.
- You should see my plan."
- </p>
- <p> That letter, signed "Fedbuster" and mailed weeks ago to California
- public officials, was only the most spectacular of dozens of
- leads traded after the fires' first week by 30 law-enforcement
- representatives at the Los Angeles office of the Bureau of Alcohol,
- Tobacco and Firearms (ATF). Ablott's team from the Los Angeles
- County sheriff's arson detail was there, as were police from
- other afflicted counties. So were FBI agents, whose Washington
- labs have the capacity to analyze the letter for everything
- from handwriting style to the DNA of the saliva used to seal
- the envelope.
- </p>
- <p> Despite all the investigative talent, however, the mood was
- glum. Arson is a crime that erases its own evidence; a hundred
- leads may not make an arrest. Moreover, even if Fedbuster were
- caught and actually admitted to having set some of the fires,
- he could not have set them all.
- </p>
- <p> Californians were unnerved and seeking a focus for their anger.
- More than one burned-out homeowner wished aloud that the arsonist
- had gone up with his handiwork. Governor Pete Wilson compared
- arsonists to child molesters, offered a $250,000 bounty and
- requested tougher sentencing. In Washington, as President Bill
- Clinton promised to help the damaged areas with their "extraordinary
- expenses," Senator Bob Dole introduced an amendment to the crime
- bill that would hit arsonists with 40-year jail terms and fines
- reaching millions of dollars.
- </p>
- <p> However, you can sentence only those you catch. By the Malibu
- fire's third day, Ablott and his crew, analyzing burn and wind
- patterns, had located the fire's ground zero within 4 ft. and
- ascertained that its author had not used an accelerant, like
- gasoline. But their best lead--several witnesses had seen
- two men in a blue pickup truck racing away from ground zero--turned out to be a bust. By Thursday Ablott's team had interviewed
- the men, who could prove they not only had alerted neighbors
- to the fire's existence but had tried to extinguish it.
- </p>
- <p> Federal investigators appeared to be on the verge of a major
- announcement this week, perhaps related to Fedbuster. Ablott
- was sifting through some 100 phone messages from the anonymous
- "We-Tip" hotline of the sheriff's department and was interested
- in interviewing a 22-year-old man arrested in Laguna Beach in
- possession of a police scanner, phony fire department IDs and
- a fire fighter's uniform. Meanwhile, three members of the Arson
- Profiler Program are quietly pulling 18-hour days at the ATF
- offices in L.A.'s World Trade Center. Founded in 1986, the program
- has dispatched staff members around the country to conduct Silence
- of the Lambs-style interviews with jailed arsonists in the hope
- of understanding motives and patterns. The profilers reread
- the Fedbuster letter, stare at maps and grease boards on the
- wall, monitor the news and try to brainstorm: if one person
- were responsible for more than one California fire, what kind
- of person would it be?
- </p>
- <p> Not everyone thinks they will come up with much. "It's b-------,"
- says an L.A. sheriff's department investigator. "This thing
- isn't going to be solved by profilers and computers. What's
- going to solve it is good old-fashioned police work."
- </p>
- <p> But ATF special-agent-in-charge Jimmy Adamcik listens to the
- profilers, and he is concerned because they do not seem to be
- able to stay focused on the recent past. Instead, he says, they
- are fixated on the future. "They keep asking about the weather
- forecasts," he says, "...the wind forecasts." Adamcik sighs.
- He is hoping for rain.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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