The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Family of 6 killed in Dekalb fire mourned

Investigat­ors seek cause; two relatives think it was electrical.

- By Wilborn P. Nobles III Wilborn.nobles@ajc.com

Aaliyah and Angel Regular wore blue dresses and white shoes as they shared a white coffin Wednesday afternoon. Damaria Brinkley stood beside the open casket containing the girls, ages 6 and 3, and brushed her hands through her nieces’ hair.

Relatives and family friends filled the Gregory B. Levett & Sons Funeral Home in Decatur to view five of the six people killed in a Dekalb County house fire.

The fire Dec. 14 killed 30-year-old Terryona Regular; her daughters Aaliyah and Angel; and two uncles, 49-year-old Pedro Coney and 55-year-old Timothy Regular.

The house was owned by family matriarch Diane Lay, 61, who died from her injuries Tuesday.

“My babies are gone,” said Octavia Regular Cooper, Terryona’s mother.

More than 20 people visited the family within the first hour of the visitation, which was slated to last eight hours. The first page of the family’s visitation signature book was quickly filled with messages of support.

Terryona also wore a blue dress because it was her favorite color, Cooper said. Her coffin was partially covered by a wreath of white and blue flowers.

The two uncles had closed caskets due to the extent of their injuries.

Funeral personnel put lifesized photograph­s of the two men beside their coffins. The attendees spoke warmly about Coney’s smile in the photo, saying it took a lot for him to break frame and smile over something.

One family friend was so

emotional that she slapped Timothy Regular’s coffin and sat next to him. She grieved and discussed how she wanted to call Coney on Tuesday night to discuss sports before she buried her face into her sleeve.

Several journalist­s with cameras lingered outside

the building throughout the day in an effort to access the family. At the same time, several other families were present to honor their own deceased relatives.

Inside the building, Cooper and others discussed how her granddaugh­ters loved to eat and laugh.

Aaliyah’s nickname was “Moonpie” because it was her favorite snack, Cooper said. She said Angel was called “Cheeks” for the way her face swelled up when she smiled.

Brinkley, who is Cooper’s other daughter, is one of the four survivors.

“I’m glad she was able to get out, but them girls,” Cooper said.

In the house of 10, in the neighborho­od off Glenwood Road, everyone was sleeping Dec. 14 when the smell of smoke filled the building, Brinkley said. The fire trapped them all inside until firefighte­rs arrived to rescue the survivors.

Investigat­ors do not know what started the fire, but Cooper and Brinkley said they think it was an electrical accident because a neighbor said he heard an explosion before the fire began after midnight.

Brinkley said she and her children, as well as Terryona and her girls, moved into Lay’s house two weeks ago. Brinkley said they had to move because their landlord sold their place without advance notice, displacing them.

Annie Jackson, a family friend, told Brinkley that “Diane used to spoil you rotten” when Brinkley was a child.

“We’ve been crying and mourning all day,” Jackson said. “I just can’t stop crying.”

Jackson told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on that Lay was a precious and strong person who loved everybody.

“When Diane used to cook, you were thinking she was cooking for the neighborho­od,” Jackson said. “She may be gone, but nobody can take the memories away.”

Bonita Lacy, Cooper’s longtime friend, said Lay was a Mcdonald’s manager who used to give everybody a job at the fast-food restaurant. Lacy called the surviving family “a good family that sets an example.”

A Gofundme account that was started to raise money for funeral expenses has netted more than $40,000. But the Rev. Dr. Andre Walker, who came by to share his condolence­s with the family, said the community needs to give the family much more support financiall­y, emotionall­y and mentally.

A funeral for the family was held at noon Thursday at Rainbow Park Baptist Church in Decatur. The service was livestream­ed on Facebook, Youtube and Rainbowpar­kbaptist.org.

 ?? ?? Damaria Brinkley holds a photograph of her aunt Diane Lay, one of the Dekalb fire victims, during Wednesday’s visitation service at Gregory B. Levett & Sons Funeral Home in Decatur.
Damaria Brinkley holds a photograph of her aunt Diane Lay, one of the Dekalb fire victims, during Wednesday’s visitation service at Gregory B. Levett & Sons Funeral Home in Decatur.
 ?? PHOTOS BY STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? Friends and family come together at the Gregory B. Levett & Sons Funeral Home in Decatur during Wednesday’s visitation service for victims of a Dekalb house fire.
PHOTOS BY STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON Friends and family come together at the Gregory B. Levett & Sons Funeral Home in Decatur during Wednesday’s visitation service for victims of a Dekalb house fire.
 ?? ?? Mourners pay their respects before large photograph­s of the Dekalb fire victims set up during the visitation service at Gregory B. Levett & Sons Funeral Home in Decatur on Wednesday.
Mourners pay their respects before large photograph­s of the Dekalb fire victims set up during the visitation service at Gregory B. Levett & Sons Funeral Home in Decatur on Wednesday.

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