Firefighters ambushed at retirement home; 1 dead
LONG BEACH, Calif. — A retirement home resident shot at firefighters who responded to a report of an explosion at the Southern California facility on Monday, killing a veteran fire captain and leaving a second firefighter and another resident wounded, officials said.
Investigators think that, based on their preliminary investigation, Thomas Kim had set a fire early Monday morning to draw first responders to his second-floor apartment at the retirement home in Long Beach, south of Los Angeles, and then opened fire, Police Chief Robert Luna said.
Kim, 77, was arrested on suspicion of murder, attempted murder and arson. Investigators were still working to determine Kim’s motive, Luna said.
The shooting happened shortly after A Long Beach firefighter stands outside Saint Mary Medical Center before a procession for Fire Capt. Dave Rosa, who was killed early Monday while responding to an emergency at a retirement home in the city.
firefighters arrived at the 11-story retirement facility around 4 a.m. and found some windows blown out, sprinklers activated, the smell of gas and a fire that they extinguished, authorities said. Firefighters were searching the building when shots rang out and the two firefighters were hit, Long Beach
Fire Chief Michael DuRee said.
Fire Capt. Dave Rosa, who had worked for the department for 17 years, died at a hospital Monday morning, DuRee said. He is survived by a wife and two children — ages 16 and 25, the chief said.
The other firefighter, Ernesto Torres, was released from the
hospital Monday and is expected to make a full recovery, officials said.
An elderly resident at the retirement home was also shot and was in critical but stable condition, Chief Luna said. The specific circumstances of how the resident was shot were not immediately known.
Eighty senior citizens remained evacuated from the retirement home Monday afternoon and were being offered health services and counseling at a local community center, the mayor said.
Dozens of firefighters stood at attention and saluted as the flag-draped coffin carrying Rosa’s body was brought out of a hospital Monday afternoon and loaded into a coroner’s van. Community members waved American flags along the street outside the hospital as the procession of police and fire vehicles escorted the van to the coroner’s office.
Luna said a revolver was recovered after Kim was taken into custody Monday morning. He had a prior arrest for car theft, the chief said.
Investigators also found two “suspicious devices” when they arrested Kim and called the bomb squad Rosa to “render those safe,” Luna said.
Detectives still have “a lot of questions about the devices that were found and the suspect’s intent,” Luna said.
“That’s the environment we work in today, as law enforcement and firefighters. You go to these scenes and you never know what’s on the other side of those doors. And these brave firefighters went through those doors and unfortunately they were met with gunfire,” Luna said earlier Monday.
Pamela Barr, 73, who has lived in the building for seven years, said she hadn’t heard of any trouble involving residents of the facility.
The residential tower near downtown Long Beach has 100 apartments for low-income people age 62 or older as well as disabled adults over age 18, according to its website.
Long Beach is a major port city with a population of more than 400,000.