Las Vegas Review-Journal

Alpine Motel owner hit with two more lawsuits

Six died in deadliest residentia­l fire in LV

- By Briana Erickson Contact Briana Erickson at berickson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-5244. Follow @Bybrianae on Twitter.

Two more wrongful death lawsuits have been filed against the owner of the Alpine Motel Apartments — the site of the deadliest residentia­l fire in Las Vegas history.

The lawsuits were filed Tuesday in Clark County District Court on behalf of the families of Cynthia Mickell and Kerry Baclaan, who died Dec. 21, 2019, in the blaze that killed six people and left 13 more injured and without a home.

“They did not have to die. There was no functionin­g fire alarm system to alert the residents of the emergency so they could escape,” wrote F. Travis Buchanan, an attorney representi­ng both families. “Making the matter more tragic was the fact that the owner and operator of the Alpine Motel barricaded the rear exit door, preventing the residents from escaping the inferno.”

The 31-page lawsuits describe the Alpine, at 213 N. Ninth St. as unsafe. It has been owned by Adolfo Orozco under Las Vegas Dragon Hotel LLC since 2013. Orozco, his wife, Erika Ayala, and his company are named as defendants in the suits. EDS Electronic­s, which maintained the fire alarm notificati­on system, as well as Totalsafet­yinc.andseveral­other security and alarm companies are named in the lawsuits.

Requests for comment from Orozco’s civil attorney, Steven Jaffe, and the other defendants were not returned.

The lawsuits claim that when the fire broke out, one tenant was using a stove for heat. They accuse the Alpine of failing to have a functionin­g heating system and a sprinkler system to suppress the fire.

Mickell, 61, died after her path was blocked by refrigerat­ors and a vending machine, which reduced the width of the doorway when she tried to escape.

Baclaan, 46, lived alone in Apartment 33, and was reportedly last seen “carrying her suitcase around the building as the motel filled with smoke.”

Stanley Wickliffe, who also is represente­d by Buchanan, was severely injured during the fire and will be suffering from those injuries for the rest of his life, according to court documents.

Since the fire, three other wrongful death lawsuits have been filed in District Court. The first was filed Jan. 8, 2020.

The Las Vegas Review-journal obtained documents from city officials that revealed the Alpine was not inspected by the Las Vegas Fire Department for nearly three years, between April 2013 and March 2016.

The documents also detailed a history of fire code violations at the Alpine dating to 2006. According to the documents, the violations included fire doors not closing properly, security bars in sleeping areas not equipped with an emergency release. and daisy-chaining extension cords and surge protectors.

Orozco and property manager Malinda Mier were charged in July with manslaught­er — one count for each ofthesixvi­ctims—and15count­sof performanc­eofanactor­neglectof duty in disregard of safety resulting in substantia­l bodily harm or death.

A preliminar­y hearing in the case, which will determine whether it will go to trial, has been ongoing since August.

 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal file @Left_eye_images ?? Six people died when the Alpine Motel Apartments in downtown Las Vegas caught fire on Dec. 21, 2019. Five wrongful death lawsuits have been filed against the owners.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal file @Left_eye_images Six people died when the Alpine Motel Apartments in downtown Las Vegas caught fire on Dec. 21, 2019. Five wrongful death lawsuits have been filed against the owners.
 ??  ?? Cynthia Mickell
Cynthia Mickell
 ??  ?? Kerry Baclaan
Kerry Baclaan

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