Chicago Sun-Times

Building in blaze that killed 10 kids in Little Village had suspicious fire in 2017

- BY FRANK MAIN, STAFF REPORTER fmain@suntimes.com | @FrankMainN­ews Contributi­ng: Carlos Ballestero­s and Mitch Dudek

The Chicago Fire Department last year recommende­d that police investigat­e a fire in the same Little Village apartment building where a blaze killed 10 children this year, according to records obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times.

A sofa caught fire on Feb. 22, 2017, in the living room of a vacant first-floor apartment at the rear of the building at 2224 S. Sacramento, the records show. No one was injured.

Ten children died last month after fire raced through a second-floor apartment at the rear of the same building. Their ages ranged from 3 months old to 16 years old. No adults were in the apartment during the fire.

Fire officials are continuing to investigat­e the cause of that blaze.

On Thursday, a source close to the investigat­ion said the fatal fire on Aug. 26 probably started around 3 a.m. — about 45 minutes before a witness called 911 at 3:45 a.m. to report flames shooting through the windows of the second-floor rear unit.

That could indicate the fire was the result of something that was smoldering in the apartment that morning, the source said. No officials have suggested the tragedy was arson.

Fire officials initially said they didn’t find any smoke detectors in the second-floor rear unit, but they later said they did find a smoke detector without batteries.

Last year’s fire was investigat­ed by the Chicago Fire Department’s Office of Fire Investigat­ions, which recommende­d that the Chicago Police arson unit “conduct a criminal investigat­ion in any manner they deem pertinent or necessary,” according to a report obtained through the Freedom of Informatio­n Act. A detective visited the scene that night after fire officials called the police department, records show.

Anthony Guglielmi, a spokesman for the police department, said detectives investigat­ed last year’s fire. He said no one was arrested.

The 6:45 p.m. fire last year “was the result of an open flame to a sofa left in the middle of the room,” the OFI report said. No smoke detectors were present, the report added. Firefighte­rs extinguish­ed the blaze, which was confined to the living room.

Merced Gutierrez, the owner of the building, told fire investigat­ors that he rented the unit to a woman who lived there with her kids for about six months. Gutierrez said he was in the process of evicting her for failing to pay rent and the apartment had been vacant for at least eight days.

Gutierrez told investigat­ors that he visited the vacant apartment at 1:30 p.m. that day and locked it. He said the tenants never returned their keys, and he didn’t change the locks. He told investigat­ors he has owned the building since 1979.

In their report, fire investigat­ors noted there were “obvious signs of the hastened departure of the former tenants.”

The OFI report didn’t name the tenants. Gutierrez and his attorney could not be reached for comment. A man who speaks for the families of the children didn’t return a call seeking comment.

Last week, a judge ordered Gutierrez to keep the building unoccupied after the city found numerous building code violations there. The next court hearing for the code violations is in December.

Court records show Gutierrez was in the process of evicting Yolanda Ayala this year from the second-floor unit in the rear where the fatal fire occurred. Five of Ayala’s children died. They were attending a sleepover with cousins and friends.

The state Department of Children and Family Services is investigat­ing allegation­s of neglect in connection with the fire.

Since 2004, Ayala was the subject of 21 prior DCFS investigat­ions, one of which resulted in her family receiving “community-based services,” the agency revealed last month. She lost five children in the fire ranging from 3 months old to 14 years old.

Sonya Carrillo, the mother of a 16-year-old boy who died, was the subject of two investigat­ions in which DCFS found she inadequate­ly supervised her kids, the agency said.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES FILE ?? Ten children were killed by a fire in the 2200 block of South Sacramento.
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES FILE Ten children were killed by a fire in the 2200 block of South Sacramento.

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