Celebrity Community Leader Calls for Federal Probe into Deadly LA-area Fire Lack of Air Support Blamed

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: September 28, 2009

MEDIA CONTACT: Sharon Bush
promise@dslextreme.com
(424) 202-0190

Note to All Media: To tour the sanctuary and areas of devastation, call first to obtain security clearance. No exceptions.

Celebrity Community Leader Calls for Federal Probe into Deadly LA-area Fire Lack of Air Support Blamed

"When the Fire Captain warned me that the fire would make a run at us in a few hours...I knew this would be a fight to the death," says Leo Grillo, regarding the day two firefighters were killed. Now those living in the devastated area face an extremely dangerous health risk, stemming from the fire.

ACTON, CA (MMD Newswire) September 28, 2009 -- While detectives continue to build a murder case against the culprit who set the massive wildfire that killed two firefighters, a prominent community leader today is calling for a full-scale, federal investigation into circumstances surrounding the deaths of Los Angeles County Fire Captain Tedmund Hall and Specialist Arnaldo Quinones. The pair died August 30 after their vehicle plunged some 800 feet down a steep mountain road in the Angeles National Forest. The men helped rescue dozens of inmate firefighters held captive at their campsite by roaring flames. But according to Leo Grillo, it was a situation that never should have happened. The actor and animal welfare activist says he should know because not only was he there, he bore witness to a critical error in judgment.

"Firefighters know the truth, but they can't tell you directly or they will lose their jobs," says Grillo, whose position on this ill-fated day was to safeguard not only his family, but the largest animal shelter of its type in the world. They were both in harm's way and bracing for what would eventually result in the largest wildfire in the history of Los Angeles County. For decades, D.E.L.T.A. Rescue has served as a sanctuary, or refuge, for more than 1,500 previously abandoned and abused animals. It is also home of Horse Rescue of America. So Grillo would get no sleep. Especially not this night. "I heard the radio traffic. And I talked to disgusted fire supervisors all night long," Grillo adds.

Photo 1, (above): AUGUST 30, 2009, 6:00 a.m. PT: Contrary to previously published reports, the atmosphere over La Canada and Acton favored a preemptive air assault, as documented by Leo Grillo, who fought vigorously to save D.E.L.T.A. Rescue, the largest animal shelter of its type in the world. Copyright by Leo Grillo. MMIX. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Photo 2 (above): AUGUST 30, 2009, 3:00 p.m. PT: After Grillo broadcasts an emergency appeal, a DC-10 tanker shows up in a failed attempt to stop the deadly fire. This image was taken thirty minutes after two firefighters plunged to their deaths. Copyright by Leo Grillo. MMIX. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

After being alerted that the Station wildfire - which began in the La Cañada area -- was bearing down on his safety haven, Grillo says he rounded up all his workers and security force. Like a circle of covered wagons in the darkness of night, staff members used their private vehicles to corral the sanctuary. They then flooded the area with high beams to herd the animals to safer territory. With a well-equipped firetruck and hoses at the ready, Grillo and his firefighting team prepared for war as a small army of orange flames advanced across the mountain.

Throughout the night, Grillo says he spoke with a number of visiting, out-of-area firefighters who confessed to him their reasons the fire grew into an out-of-control monster, spreading in three different directions. Their answers were the same. "Very little air support," Grillo says the firefighters repeated. But on the night prior, a fire had broken out in the wealthy seaside canyons of Rancho Palos Verdes, near the headquarters of the Trump National Golf Club. Aggressive nighttime air assaults at the onset of this blaze helped prevent the fire from causing widespread damage. "Yet on [the La Cañada] fire to save money, the county held off on air support," Grillo charges.

Though the flames tip-toeing from La Cañada had died by morning, a foreboding threat loomed. With a flow of warm wind forecast for the day, Grillo says Los Angeles County should have ordered a preemptive air assault on what was identified as a mercurial area blanketed by hazardous dry brush and chaparral. "For hours, there was no air attack to easily extinguish the remaining threat," recalls Grillo. "So I called the news radio to let the world know that we were sitting in the eye of a storm." Thirty-two minutes after Grillo's broadcast, a DC-10 air tanker flew overhead and dropped retardant.

The four-hour delay was reportedly due to heavy smoke -- an official statement Grillo charges is a fabrication. "There was no smoke or wind for hours as [documented] by my news photo," disputes Grillo, who is an active member of the National Association of Press Photographers.

When the fire turned treacherous, Grillo admits he feared for his life. "After the Fire Captain visited me and told me the fire would make a run at us in a few hours...I knew this would be a fight to the death," recalls Grillo. He and ground crews stood by as the truck carrying Hall and Quinones was overtaken by a giant wall of burning mass. To date, the Station fire has blackened well over 240-square-miles of the Angeles National Forest. Scores of dwellings and invaluable properties were destroyed. Grillo hopes that a thorough federal investigation will result in the removal of the individual(s) responsible for withholding the air attack on this fire. "As long as these incompetents are in charge, we are not safe. Our firefighters are not safe," he warns.

Grillo adds that the front reason for calling for a federal investigation into the events that led up to the deaths of Hall and Quinones is "to [help] protect the lives of firefighters who put themselves on the line to defend against killer firestorms and who depend upon their superiors to protect them with air cover," explains Grillo.

According to latest statistics, more than 3,650 firefighters from as far away as Montana have fought the Station fire which carries an estimated cost of $78 million so far. Government data show that people were the blame for the 5,208 wildfires that occurred in Southern California in 2008. This is the only region in the United States to see a significant rise in the number of wildfires caused by humans. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has offered a $100,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the arsonist who sparked the blaze. Under California law, this figure is the maximum the chief executive can offer.

Authorities report that several firefighters have been exposed to cyanide gas in two separate incidents as they were mopping up hot spots near Acton, where Grillo's 150-acre sanctuary and his two state-ofthe-art veterinary hospitals are located.

Now those residing in or near the broad area of devastation face a serious health risk as pathogenic spores of the extremely dangerous coccidioides fungi continue to be unearthed. Coccidioidomycosis is an infectious, airborne disease that attacks the respiratory system of humans and animals alike. Typically known as valley fever, it is characterized by a high internal body temperature and various respiratory symptoms. If untreated and chronic, this disorder can become fatal by spreading to other organs of the body. Grillo and his medical staff are currently alerting those who live or work in the greater Acton area about this acute health hazard. People and animals with compromised immune systems are particularly in danger.

"We are testing it for now with at least one suspected case," reports Dr. Gaylord Brown, D.E.L.T.A. Rescue's chief veterinarian.

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SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS FOR MEDIA
D.E.L.T.A. Rescue is the largest no-kill, care-for-life sanctuary in the United States. It is the largest animal rescue of its type in the world. On rare exceptions, tours for donors are held only three times each year. Otherwise, no visitors are allowed. However, on September 28, 2009, between the hours of 1:00 p.m. and 3:00 p.m. PST, the gates will open to the mass media for the first time in more than 30 years. This is a rare moment.

Since there are no posted signs and some road conditions remain hazardous, a security escort will caravan media representatives from a specified location in Acton, CA, to the mountaintop sanctuary. This will happen promptly at 12:30 p.m. Once inside the gates of D.E.L.T.A. Rescue, you will be able to photograph designated areas of the 150-acre refuge, which includes Horse Rescue of America. You will not be able to enter the property without an escort.

You are thanked kindly in advance for respecting these protected and sacred grounds.

MEDIA CONTACT:
Sharon Bush
(424) 202-0190
promise@dslextreme.com


 

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