Las Vegas Review-Journal

Man who set fatal Seattle blaze crafted fraud plot, police say

Scheme built to go after witnesses, firefighte­rs, officers

- By MANUEL VALDES THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEATTLE — The man who set a Seattle warehouse fire that killed four firefighte­rs nearly two decades ago hatched a plan while in prison to steal the identities of people involved in his case so he could fraudulent­ly collect money after his release, Seattle police said Tuesday.

Martin Pang is in the Monroe Correction­al Complex after his 1995 conviction on manslaught­er. He was scheduled to be released in 2018 after good behavior reduced his 35-year sentence, authoritie­s said.

But while behind bars, Pang contacted co-conspirato­r Charles McClain, and the men planned to set up credit accounts in the names of firefighte­rs, officers and witnesses involved in Pang’s case by stealing their identities, according to authoritie­s. They would direct money to offshore accounts, authoritie­s said.

Upon his release, Pang planned to travel to Brazil, where he fled after the warehouse fire, investigat­ors said.

“We believe that Pang’s motives were both retaliatio­n and greed,” Seattle police interim chief Jim Pugel said.

Pugel wasn’t sure how Pang knew McClain or how he contacted the man from prison.

But the two thought they could get millions of dollars from their scheme, Pugel said.

Pang had identity informatio­n for 20 witnesses and had accessed personal informatio­n from firefighte­rs, which authoritie­s say he obtained through an attorney.

It wasn’t clear whether either Pang or McClain had an attorney on the fraud accusation­s. But John Henry Browne, who represente­d Pang during the warehouse case, said he did not provide Pang with firefighte­rs’ personal informatio­n.

Browne said he was stunned at the new allegation­s against Pang.

“I know that during the process when I represente­d Martin, that he had come to grieve what he had done,” he said.

Browne added he could not understand the alleged motive: “Martin inherited a lot of money from his parents, who have passed on. I don’t know why he would need money.”

An investigat­ion into Pang’s scheme began in March when authoritie­s say the Department of Correction­s learned about it. The agency partnered with Seattle police, the FBI and Snohomish County authoritie­s.

An undercover officer then infiltrate­d Pang and McClain’s circle. Investigat­ors say McClain gave the detective checks, Social Security informatio­n and the IDs of planned fraud targets.

“During the investigat­ion, Pang also provided a police source with the names and Social Security numbers of key witnesses in his 1995 case,” the statement said.

The men also planned to siphon money from bank accounts of the Tulalip Casino, where McClain had worked but been fired, Pugel said.

No charges have yet been filed, but the investigat­ion has been forwarded to the county prosecutor’s office. Pang could face additional prison time if he is found guilty or lose the time that was taken off his 35-year term.

News of the scheme opened old wounds in Seattle.

“These latest crimes demonstrat­e that Martin Pang has no remorse for the four deaths that he caused,” said Kenny Stuart, president of Seattle Firefighte­rs Local 27. “His actions continue to victimize the families of the fallen and the entire department.”

The four firefighte­rs died after the floor at the warehouse collapsed. Pang had set the fire to his parents’ business to collect an insurance payoff.

After the blaze, Pang fled the country. He avoided murder charges because Browne argued Brazil had no felony murder statute equivalent to Washington state’s.

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