El Dorado News-Times

Suspect in Atlanta overpass fire arrested

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ATLANTA (AP) — A man charged with arson Saturday in the raging fire that collapsed part of Interstate 85 north of downtown Atlanta has been arrested more than a dozen times, mostly on drug charges.

Jail records show that Basil Eleby has been arrested repeatedly since 1995. Accused of starting the fire below the elevated highway, Eleby now faces charges of first-degree arson and first-degree property damage.

Sophia Bruner and Barry Thomas, both charged with criminal trespass, were arrested along with Eleby on Friday.

"We believe they were together when the fire was set and Eleby is the one who set the fire," Deputy Insurance Commission­er Jay Florence said.

The fire sent flames and smoke high into the air Thursday from an area used to store stateowned constructi­on materials and equipment. It burned so hot that the concrete and steel overpass disintegra­ted, crippling traffic in a city known for dreadful rush-hour congestion.

Florence would not discuss how the fire was started or why, saying those details would be released as the investigat­ion progresses. Eleby's bond was set at $200,000 pending his next court appearance on April 14.

Dozens of firefighte­rs battling the roaring blaze beneath the roadway moved safely out of harm's way amid telltale signs the roadway was breaking apart from the intense heat.

"They heard the cracking of the concrete," Atlanta Fire Chief Joel Baker said. "They could see concrete was flying all over the place toward firefighte­rs."

Firefighte­rs shut down the roadway before it fell and retreated safely without injury.

Experts in structural engineerin­g said fires

on highways and bridges rarely burn long enough or hot enough to cause a complete collapse — but it has happened. Intense heat can compromise even steel-reinforced concrete, said Lauren Stewart, director of the Structural Engineerin­g and Materials Laboratory at Georgia Tech in Atlanta.

"With fires, especially fires that burn for long periods and with high heat, you can see structures, anything from buildings to bridges, can

have their material properties degrade," Stewart said.

It's happened before. In 1996, a fire in a big pile of tires beneath I-95 in Philadelph­ia left a span too weak to handle cars, shutting down 4 miles of the busy East Coast route.

Atlanta commuters struggling to find different routes or use mass transit had better get used to longer commutes: Repairs will take "at least several months," said Russell McMurry, commission­er of the

Georgia Department of Transporta­tion.

McMurry announced Friday that 350 feet of highway will need to be replaced in both directions on I-85, which carries about 400,000 cars a day through Atlanta and is one of the South's most important north-south routes.

 ??  ?? Fire: Constructi­on crews work on a section of an overpass that collapsed from a large fire on Interstate 85 in Atlanta on Friday.
Fire: Constructi­on crews work on a section of an overpass that collapsed from a large fire on Interstate 85 in Atlanta on Friday.

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