Los Angeles Times

Firefighte­r hurt in fall dies

The first responder tumbled from a ladder during a weekend training exercise.

- By Ruben Vives and Veronica Rocha ruben.vives@latimes.com Twitter: @latvives veronica.rocha @latimes.com Twitter: VeronicaRo­chaLA

A Los Angeles firefighte­r died Monday morning, two days after he fell from an aerial ladder during a training exercise in downtown L.A.

The Los Angeles Fire Department announced Kelly Wong’s death on Twitter in a statement.

The firefighte­r, 29, was participat­ing in an exercise Saturday morning in the 300 block of South Main Street.

Wong was immediatel­y taken to Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center, where he was listed in critical condition.

Minutes after the accident, firefighte­rs went to the hospital, Fire Chief Ralph Terrazas said. Other firefighte­rs volunteere­d to cover Wong’s work shifts.

“Despite the heroic efforts of doctors and nurses at the hospital, firefighte­r Wong succumbed to his injuries early Monday morning,” the Fire Department said in a statement.

Wong had been a firefighte­r with the department for two years and was assigned to Station 92 in Rancho Park.

He was set to transfer to Station 9, which serves the skid row neighborho­od and downtown L.A.

Wong was working at the station at the time of his fall.

“It is always a tragedy to lose one of our own, especially an accomplish­ed individual who was still at the beginning of what was certainly going to be a promising career,” Terrazas said in the statement.

At 10:30 a.m. Monday a pair of Los Angeles police motorcycle officers escorted a caravan of LAFD vehicles and a coroner’s van carrying Wong’s body from the medical center to the L.A. County coroner’s office.

Firefighte­rs, fire paramedics, sheriff’s deputies and officers from the L.A. Police Department lined Marengo Street as the procession rolled beneath a giant American flag tied to a pair of aerial ladders.

Wong’s family — his wife, Danielle; his infant son, Colton; his mother, Ann; his mother-in-law and fatherin-law, Barbara and Michael Quinlan; and his sisters-inlaw Nicole and Stephanie — were present as his body arrived at the coroner’s office.

Some stood by and watched as the American flag draped over his body was carefully folded and then given to his family.

His body was then taken to the coroner’s office as family members held each other.

“I told the family that they’re not alone,” Terrazas said. “Colton has ... 3,500 uncles and aunts. We’re going to watch over them. It’s our obligation.”

Mayor Eric Garcetti said he had known Wong for a couple of years when the young firefighte­r graduated from the Fire Department’s academy at Terminal Island in San Pedro with top academic honors.

Wong emigrated from Hong Kong when he was 8, the mayor said.

“He was a hero to our city, a hero for this department, a hero for his family,” Garcetti said.

Fire Engineer Mike Spears said he worked with Wong for more than a year at Station 92, where he cooked delicious meals for the firehouse. He said Wong wanted to learn as much as he could about the department and firefighti­ng.

Wong was “dedicated to the craft,” Spears said, and a loving and doting father.

“He was always showing us new pictures of baby Colton,” he said. “He was a happy dad, and we’re going to miss him.”

The fire department is investigat­ing his death, Terrazas said.

Once the investigat­ion is complete, the chief said he hopes to learn whether improvemen­ts need to be made in the training exercises.

This was the department’s first deadly accident involving an aerial ladder, Terrazas said.

He declined to provide details about what might have occurred until the investigat­ion is completed. Terrazas said he thinks that Wong participat­ed in similar exercises in the past.

“It was a part of the standard type of training,” said Margaret Stewart, a department spokeswoma­n.

The training exercises, which are typically held on weekends, give firefighte­rs an opportunit­y to practice how they would respond to a blaze in a high-rise building, she said.

During the drills, firefighte­rs practice pulling hose lines, perform roof ventilatio­n and climb aerial ladders, Stewart said.

The California Division of Occupation­al Safety and Health is also investigat­ing the accident, agency spokesman Luke Brown said. The investigat­ion will include reviewing the fire department’s injury and illness prevention plan, inspecting the scene of the accident and talking to witnesses.

Wong is the third LAFD firefighte­r to die this year.

Capt. David T. Moorman, 50, died on Feb. 5 when he suffered a medical emergency. He was off-duty and in his home.

Moorman worked with the department 27 years and was assigned to Station 96 in Chatsworth.

In April, Battalion Chief Jerome Boyd suffered a medical emergency and died while driving a city vehicle near downtown L.A.

The 55-year-old firefighte­r worked for the department for more than 30 years. Boyd was assigned to the department’s Fire Prevention Bureau’s Public Safety Section.

 ?? Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? FIREFIGHTE­RS salute as the body of Kelly Wong is driven from the Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center. Wong died Monday, two days after falling from an aerial ladder during a training drill in downtown L.A.
Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times FIREFIGHTE­RS salute as the body of Kelly Wong is driven from the Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center. Wong died Monday, two days after falling from an aerial ladder during a training drill in downtown L.A.
 ??  ?? WONG’S widow, Danielle, holds an American f lag. It’s a tragedy “to lose one of our own,” the fire chief said of Wong, who had been with the agency for two years.
WONG’S widow, Danielle, holds an American f lag. It’s a tragedy “to lose one of our own,” the fire chief said of Wong, who had been with the agency for two years.

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