The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Could officials have prevented tragic fire?

Neighbors reported drugs, trash, thefts, neglected children.

- By Ellen Knickmeyer and Paul Elias

OAKLAND, CALIF. — City and state officials fielded years of complaints about dangerous conditions, drugs, neglected children, trash, thefts and squabbles at the illegally converted warehouse where 36 partygoers were killed in a weekend fire, with inspectors knocking on the door as recently as two weeks before the blaze.

With all the attention from police, child welfare authoritie­s, building inspectors and others, some of those who saw what was going on at the undergroun­d artists’ colony say they figured time and again that authoritie­s would shut it down. But they never did. “It makes me so sad that all this has been there this whole long time,” said neighbor Phyllis Waukazoo. “This was an accident waiting to happen. That could have been prevented.”

Mayor Libby Schaaf deflected questions about whether more aggressive action by authoritie­s could have prevented the tragedy at the building known as the Ghost Ship.

The cause of the fire is still under investigat­ion, and prosecutor­s said they are looking into the possibilit­y of criminal charges.

On Tuesday, sheriff ’s Deputy Tya Modeste said the families of 26 of the victims had been notified. She said an additional nine bodies have been tentativel­y identified and that officials have been unable to identify one victim.

Record searches and interviews indicate that the couple who leased the warehouse and turned it into living spaces and artists’ studios, Derick Ion Almena and Micah Allison, were already under scrutiny before the fire by several agencies.

Some of those agencies had been told or could have seen for themselves that the family of five and their dozens of artist tenants were living in a warehouse that had no permit to operate as a living space and allegedly had no proper kitchen, electricit­y, adequate fire exits or solid stairs.

Almena, 46, is on probation for receiving stolen property, an Airstream trailer he was accused of stealing and stashing at the warehouse. The terms of his probation allowed authoritie­s to enter his home to search without a warrant, records show.

Child welfare workers had taken away the couple’s three children in mid2015 but returned them by this past summer, despite the illegal conditions at the warehouse and the children being hungry, infested with lice and frequently truant, Micah Allison’s father and other acquaintan­ces said.

Almena confirmed in a 2015 document that child welfare workers had visited the warehouse at least twice.

Child welfare authoritie­s refused to comment on the family, citing privacy laws. In returning the children, the authoritie­s set certain conditions, including that the youngsters be out of the warehouse during the many parties held there, according to those who knew the couple.

On the night of the fire, Allison and the three children had checked into an Oakland hotel, according to Almena.

All of them survived. Almena said in a TV interview that he had little involvemen­t in the party and had gone to the hotel as well.

Most recently, Oakland city inspectors received complaints on Nov. 13 about the warehouse being remodeled into residences and on Nov. 14 about an “illegal interior building structure,” city records showed.

City officials sent a violation notice for the first complaint and opened an investigat­ion for the second one.

Darin Ranelletti, interim city building chief, told reporters an inspector went to the Ghost Ship on Nov. 17 to follow up on the complaint.

 ?? SANCHEZ / AP MARCIO JOSE ?? Emergency crews stage recovery efforts at the site of a warehouse fire Tuesday in Oakland, Calif.
SANCHEZ / AP MARCIO JOSE Emergency crews stage recovery efforts at the site of a warehouse fire Tuesday in Oakland, Calif.

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