Los Angeles Times

Caltech graduate declared unfit for trial

The Palo Alto woman is accused of setting the Fawn forest fire, which injured three.

- By Nathan Solis

A Shasta County judge ruled on Tuesday that a Palo Alto woman charged with starting the Fawn fire in September is mentally unfit to stand trial.

Alexandra Souverneva, 31, is accused of sparking a blaze in forest land north of Redding that injured three firefighte­rs, destroyed 185 buildings and charred more than 8,500 acres.

Souverneva graduated from Caltech in 2012 with bachelor’s degrees in chemistry and biology and worked as a chemistry research associate at Bay Area companies from 2016 to 2019, according to her LinkedIn profile.

In September, she was arrested and charged with arson in connection with the wildfire.

On Tuesday, Judge Adam Ryan ruled that Souverneva was mentally incompeten­t to stand trial and put the prosecutio­n on indefinite hold, according to Briona Haney, spokespers­on for the Shasta County district attorney’s office.

According to the ruling, Souverneva is unable to aid her attorneys in her defense because she does not understand the court proceeding­s.

Last month, the judge ordered an evaluation of Souverneva’s mental fitness by two psychologi­sts. Both found her incompeten­t to stand trial, according to the district attorney’s office.

Souverneva’s defense attorney, Gregg Cohen, initially raised doubts about his client’s competency.

Souverneva will now be evaluated for placement in a state mental hospital, where she will be treated, with the possibilit­y that she could be declared competent to stand trial in the future.

Cohen did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Souverneva has also been charged with felony arson in Monterey County in connection with an Aug. 8 fire, according to Chris

Knight, a Monterey County assistant district attorney.

Souverneva said that on Sept. 22, the day the Fawn fire started, she was trying to boil creek water that was contaminat­ed with bear urine, according to a criminal complaint.

She told California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection investigat­ors that she was hiking to Canada when she became thirsty and found a puddle of water near a dry creek bed, according to court records.

After she attempted to filter the liquid with a tea bag, she tried to start a fire and boil the water, she said.

She drank the water and walked uphill, she told authoritie­s, until she saw smoke and “airplanes dropping pink stuff,” then contacted the fire department.

Quarry workers reported seeing a woman matching Souverneva’s descriptio­n who was “acting irrational­ly” near where the fire began.

Court documents indicate the woman continued walking east into vegetation, leaving behind two carbon dioxide cartridges and a battery along a dirt road.

Later that night, fire officials found Souverneva as they battled the growing blaze and assessed her for possible dehydratio­n.

At the time, she was carrying a cigarette lighter and a “pink and white item containing a green leafy substance she admitted to smoking that day,” Cal Fire Officer Matt Alexander reported. She also was carrying carbon dioxide cartridges that matched the ones found near the quarry, according to the criminal complaint.

After graduating from

Palo Alto High School in 2009, Souverneva was a research assistant and a teaching assistant during her studies at CalTech, also writing for the school newspaper, according to her LinkedIn.

She was a doctoral student in environmen­tal chemistry at State University of New York College Environmen­tal Sciences and Forestry from 2014 to 2015.

From 2016 to 2019, she was a research associate in chemistry for Nanosyn in Santa Clara, then a research associate in medicinal chemistry at Gilead Sciences in Foster City for eight months.

Souverneva is not the first Bay Area resident with ties to academia to be charged with starting wildfires this year.

Former college instructor Gary Stephen Maynard was charged in connection with a string of arson fires on federal forest land, including near the Dixie fire in Northern California.

Maynard is reported to have worked at several California universiti­es, including Santa Clara University.

 ?? Douglas County (Nev.) Sheriff's Office ALEXANDRA SOUVERNEVA ?? also is charged in another fire.
Douglas County (Nev.) Sheriff's Office ALEXANDRA SOUVERNEVA also is charged in another fire.

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