The Signal

Fire cause investigat­ors seek source of Tick Fire

- By Jim Holt Signal Senior Staff Writer

In the daily Tick Fire updates posted by fire officials, one column on their checklist - alongside homes destroyed, acres burned, residents displaced - has remained unchanged since the fire began a week ago, its cause.

Each Tick Fire update reports the same status when it comes to cause: unknown.

Now that containmen­t of the Tick Fire nears completion, arson investigat­ors are expected to poke through the charred rubble inside Tick Canyon for clues.

Lt. Sue Burakowski, who heads up the Los Angeles County Sheriff Department’s Arson/Explosives Detail, joined arson investigat­ors assigned to the Los Angeles County Fire Department on a recent survey of the fire source.

The lead investigat­or on a search for a cause

of the Tick Fire is Fire Investigat­or Tim Carillo, of the county fire department.

Carillo was out of the office all day Wednesday, but Burakowski and others close to the probe provided some insight into what caused one of SCV’s most damaging fires.

“The area where it is believed the cause of the Tick Fire began is on federal land,” Burakowski said Wednesday.

“We went up there together and worked side by side,” she said.

The Tick Fire began near the intersecti­on of Tick Canyon Road and Summit Knoll Road, said Arson Investigat­or Jermaine Johnson who works with Carillo. The source is at the southern most tip of uninhabite­d Tick Canyon, where the first homes appear.

“I was out there and I was on the scene later on that day,” Johnson said, referring to the day of fire cause investigat­ors from both the fire department and LASD went to the origin of the Tick Fire.

Finding the cause of the fire is expected to take time, investigat­ors from both agencies said.

Both Burakowski and Johnson were asked about wide-spread reports on social media, speculatin­g about the cause.

Each investigat­or said what the daily status sheet has been saying: the cause remains unknown.

And, the arson investigat­ors are not the only ones looking for answers.

A forensic team of investigat­ors with the Los Angeles County Department of Medical Examiner-Coroner have questions about a human skeleton found in the Tick Fire’s wake.

“Right now, the decedent is listed as Undetermin­ed Doe #20,” Sarah Ardalani, spokeswoma­n for the coroner, said Wednesday.

Unidentifi­ed human remains are tagged John Doe if they’re male, Jane Doe is they’re female. They’re called “Doe” when the gender has not been determined.

One of the many questions coroner investigat­ors want answered is the gender of bones found in the Tick Fire.

“Law enforcemen­t placed a security hold on the case,” Ardalani said, meaning the only informatio­n she can disclose is the case number, the name of the decedent, a date of birth and date of death.

 ?? Dan Watson/The Signal ?? Flames approach a community near Grand Canyon Road in Canyon Country as a water-dropping helicopter passes over last week. Investigat­ors continue to look for the cause of the Tick Fire, which endangered more than 10,000 SCV homes.
Dan Watson/The Signal Flames approach a community near Grand Canyon Road in Canyon Country as a water-dropping helicopter passes over last week. Investigat­ors continue to look for the cause of the Tick Fire, which endangered more than 10,000 SCV homes.

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