Los Angeles Times

Outside the tent, a flash and a boom

String of violent arson attacks rattles L.A.’s homeless community

- By James Queally

Curled up in bed with his two cats nearby, Freddie was reading a paperback novel and drifting toward sleep late on a Sunday night when someone blew a hole in the side of his home.

The last two sounds Freddie says he heard were the roar of a car engine followed by a resounding boom that left him dazed and dizzy, enveloped in smoke while his ears rang.

Freddie doesn’t think anyone was trying to hurt him specifical­ly. But he’s certain his tent under the Sunset Boulevard overpass in Echo Park was the target of the explosion, which was set off by what police described as a firecracke­r.

“I know it’s not directed toward me as an individual,” he said. “But it is directed toward me as a homeless person.”

The Oct. 6 incident was the latest in a string of unsettling attacks involving fire or incendiary devices that since late August have in some cases left homeless people dead or injured and entire encampment­s scorched across the Los Angeles area. In at least eight different incidents, flammable liquids or makeshift explosives have been lobbed at homeless people or their tents, highlighti­ng the dangers faced by the city’s most

2,500 Fires involving the Los Angeles homeless community in 2018, roughly double the number in 2017. 2,320 Fires in the homeless community through September of this year. Source: Los Angeles Fire Department

vulnerable population at a time when Los Angeles’ homeless crisis continues to grow and resources are spread thin.

The acts have involved homeless-on-homeless violence as well as targeted attacks by outsiders, leaving some activists concerned that frustratio­n with the city’s growing homeless population has reached a violent tipping point.

Additional danger

There were 2,500 fires involving the homeless community throughout Los Angeles in 2018, double the number the city saw in 2017, said Capt. Patrick Leonard of the Los Angeles Fire Department’s arson and counterter­rorism section. By the end of September, there had already been 2,320 such incidents in Los Angeles, meaning the figure is on pace to rise for the second year.

The numbers include arson as well as accidental fires caused by people cooking or warming themselves.

The fires add another dangerous challenge for those living on the streets. In addition to the obvious risk of injury, activists say the fires can destroy what little shelter homeless people have as well as documents needed to apply for housing or other services.

Through the first six months of 2019, violent crimes targeting homeless victims jumped 34%, with 1,239 reported incidents compared with 922 during the same period in 2018, LAPD records show.

The spate of incidents began in August, when authoritie­s said two men threw a “firework” in the direction of a homeless encampment on Colorado Boulevard.

The resulting blaze quickly grew into a brush fire that led to evacuation­s in Glendale and shut down stretches of the 2 and 134 freeways near Eagle Rock. No one was hurt in the attack, but a firefighte­r suffered minor injuries, officials said. Two men, including the son of the Eagle Rock Chamber of Commerce president, were arrested; prosecutor­s have yet to file charges and officials have not commented on a motive.

The next day, an “ignitable liquid” was used to set fire to a tent in skid row, Leonard said. The man inside, a beloved neighborho­od musician named Dwayne Fields, died a short time later. Another homeless man has been charged with murder in Fields’ death. Pete White, executive director of the Los Angeles Community Action Network, a group that advocates on behalf of the homeless, said the fatal blaze was one of a number of tent fires in the skid row area in August, with several occurring near the same intersecti­on where Fields was attacked.

On Sept. 5, a homeless woman was accused of setting a homeless man on fire in a South L.A. encampment near railroad tracks off West Slauson Avenue, Leonard said. A week later, Glendale police arrested a homeless man who was caught on video setting a pile of cardboard boxes aflame while a man slept underneath. Glendale Police Sgt. Dan Suttles said investigat­ors believe the victim in that case was deliberate­ly targeted, but declined to comment on a motive. Both victims sustained burns but survived.

The same day, Los Angeles police found the burned body of a man stuffed into a shopping cart near a homeless encampment in the Sepulveda Basin in Van Nuys. An autopsy revealed the man died of a “perforatin­g wound to the chest,” though it was not clear if the fire had been set before or after his death. A law enforcemen­t official told The Times the man was homeless and that police believe he was killed elsewhere.

Ten days later, someone lobbed a Molotov cocktail into a Chatsworth encampment where at least 15 people normally sleep, destroying a number of tents and donations recently dropped off by a pastor, Leonard and local activists said.

Rita Dunn, who had been living in the encampment at the time, remembers watching fire shoot up palm trees, raining burning fronds onto people’s belongings. A number of propane tanks in the area exploded as the fire spread, said Dunn, who added that many of the encampment’s residents were asleep and could have been killed had the fire spread quicker.

“People were kind of like waking up … kind of like what’s going on,” she said. “I was confused. I was yelling, ‘You’ve got to get out of here!’ ”

Rising tensions

LAPD Cmdr. Donald Graham, who coordinate­s the agency’s response to issues of homelessne­ss, noted that while there has been a surge in violent crimes committed against homeless victims, the number of violent crimes linked to homeless suspects has also jumped by 26% in the first half of 2019.

Graham said the majority of the crimes involve violence within the homeless community, a situation that has worsened as the homeless population grows.

“There are certainly tensions that are rising within the homeless population … the connective tissue between them all is the increase in the concentrat­ion,” he said. “As the homeless encampment­s increase, so do fights over territory, over property, over intangible­s, as well as domestic violence.”

Graham acknowledg­ed that anti-homeless sentiment could have played a role in attacks in places like Chatsworth, where plans to build a large homeless housing complex in the neighborho­od have been met with intense resistance.

Leonard and Graham warned of reading too much into the recent upticks. Neither the LAPD nor LAFD doggedly tracked incidents specific to the homeless community before 2017. Still, given the prevalence of hot plates and open flames in encampment­s, and the amount of flammable material often collected in places like skid row, officials said, the rise in incidents is troubling.

“The thing about fires, as opposed to any of the other crimes that the Police Department deals with, is that fire is not specific to one person,” Leonard said. “It’s not particular­ly targeted to one person. It can and does spread to buildings, to cars to create panic in the community.”

In skid row encampment­s, the use of fire to settle disputes has become increasing­ly common, said White.

In most cases, homeless people will set fires to a neighbor’s belongings if they are hoarding bulky items or taking up too much space in cramped encampment­s. But fires set with the specific intent of harming a person are rare, said White, who expressed concern that people from outside the homeless community might use news of homeless-on-homeless violence as cover to stage their own attacks.

Public sentiment toward the homeless community has grown increasing­ly tense. Los Angeles police last week shifted downtown patrols in response to city workers’ complaints that they felt unsafe entering and leaving buildings near City Hall and the Civic Center area, and attempts to provide additional homeless space in Koreatown and Chatsworth in recent months have been met with strong resistance from neighborho­od groups.

In September, President Trump said homelessne­ss was “destroying” cities like Los Angeles, and reports arose that his administra­tion was considerin­g a wide array of plans to attack the problem, including deployment of the National Guard, though no concrete policy proposals have surfaced.

“It’s that kind of approach to homelessne­ss that I think makes it easy for the general public, who is often misinforme­d about why people are homeless or why they are on the street, to then respond with vitriol, and then even worse, with violence,” said Maria Foscarinis, executive director of the National Law Center on Homelessne­ss and Poverty.

A solitary tent

Freddie, who did not want his last name used or picture taken for fear he might be attacked again, said he keeps to himself to avoid those kinds of problems. While there are small enclaves of homeless people dotting Echo Park or Reservoir Street on either side of the overpass where Freddie lays his head, his tent stands alone.

The blast went off by his feet, but Freddie said he normally dozes off with his body in the opposite direction. His head should have been in the exact spot where the firecracke­r, which he described as an M-80, exploded.

Freddie said he’s been living with his two cats under the overpass — not far from a tattoo parlor and a coffee shop — for about four months, the result of a “downward spiral” that started when his longtime girlfriend died in 2018.

In the time he’s been on the streets, Freddie said, he’s received his share of kindness. Activists with the homeless advocacy group Services Not Sweeps provided him with a new tent shortly after the attack, and the owner of the local coffee shop met him with a smile and quickly poured him a cup when Freddie walked through the front door one morning last week.

But in recent months, Freddie said, he’s noticed people shouting or cursing at him from the overpass, sometimes throwing items at other homeless people if they drift toward the tunnel. In the days after the attack, he said, he’d slept only about three hours, the mere sound of a car engine stirring panic.

Standing next to the remains of his former tent, Freddie wondered aloud if a similar attack on a housed Angeleno would have drawn a larger police response or public outcry.

“Why am I less of a person?” he asked.

 ?? Los Angeles Community Action Network ?? DWAYNE FIELDS, a homeless musician, died after a flammable liquid was used to set his tent on fire.
Los Angeles Community Action Network DWAYNE FIELDS, a homeless musician, died after a flammable liquid was used to set his tent on fire.

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