Santa Fe New Mexican

Gender-reveal party sparked 47,000-acre fire

- By Antonia Noori Farzan

In April 2017, the Sawmill Fire swept across the dry grasslands of southern Arizona, rapidly burning a charred path through open rangelands and engulfing the mesquite-covered foothills of the Santa Rita mountains. The blaze ultimately spread over 47,000 acres of land, forcing residents to evacuate their homes as roughly 800 firefighte­rs fought to get it under control.

The cause? A gender-reveal party gone horribly wrong.

Dennis Dickey, an off-duty Border Patrol agent, was celebratin­g his wife’s pregnancy at a party near Green Valley, Ariz., on April 23, 2017, his attorney told the Arizona Daily Star on Friday. In preparatio­n, he had filled a target with colored powder. When it exploded, it would reveal their future child’s sex: pink for a girl, or blue for a boy.

The target also contained Tannerite, a legal but highly explosive substance, U.S. Forest Service special agent Brent Robinson wrote in an affidavit filed in federal court on Sept. 20. When Dickey, now 37, fired his rifle at the target, the ensuing explosion sparked a fire which quickly spread through the dry brush, spurred on by unusually high winds and lower-than-average rainfall. By the time that it was fully contained over a week later, the fire had done $8 million worth of damage.

Dickey immediatel­y reported the fire to law enforcemen­t and admitted that he had been responsibl­e for starting it, the affidavit says. He was charged with violating U.S. Forest Service regulation­s by causing a fire without a permit, a misdemeano­r offense. On Friday, the U.S. attorney’s office in Arizona announced that Dickey had pleaded guilty.

Dickey and his attorney, Sean Chapman, couldn’t be reached late Sunday night to confirm whether the baby was a boy or a girl.

When gender-reveal videos began appearing on YouTube roughly a decade ago, they featured couples taking part in fairly low-impact activities: popping balloons to release pink or blue confetti, or cutting into cakes filled with pink or blue icing. The trend has been criticized for reinforcin­g gendered stereotype­s, and ignoring the fact that some children’s gender identities don’t match with their biological sex. Still, the videos’ popularity has only grown: In 2017, the number of American viewers watching gender-reveal videos was 60 percent higher than the previous year, Stephanie Shih, a spokespers­on for YouTube, told the Washington Post in May.

While the incident in Arizona may be the first time that a gender-reveal party has ended in a wildfire and caused $8 million in damage, it isn’t the only occasion when the much-hyped reveal has taken a strange, even disastrous turn. Prior mishaps include a California grandfathe­r-to-be getting smacked in the face with a powder-filled baseball and ending up with blue hair, an expectant New Jersey father breaking his ankle while kicking a football that spewed out pink paint, and a Philadelph­iaarea couple accidental­ly shooting pink fireworks into a crowd and sending their family and friends screaming and running for cover.

During a court appearance on Friday, Dickey told the judge that the fire “was a complete accident,” the Daily Star reported. He added, “I feel absolutely horrible about it. It was probably one of the worst days of my life.”

As part of his plea agreement, Dickey will star in a public service announceme­nt created in partnershi­p with the U.S. Forest Service. He will spend five years on probation, and has agreed to pay restitutio­n totaling $8,188,069, the U.S. attorney’s office said in a news release.

Whether he’ll actually pay the whole $8 million is another story. The news release from the U.S. attorney’s office says that Dickey will make an initial payment of $100,000, then make monthly payments after that. According to the Arizona Daily Star and the Green Valley News, Dickey agreed in court to pay $500 a month for the next 20 years, which adds up to $120,000.

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