Friday, March 15, 2013
The mystery surrounding a Manorville fire that left a woman and her
dog dead -- and another man badly injured -- is mired in details that
include a home seized by the county for back taxes and a man "known" for
his behavior in the past, according to fire officials.
Suffolk County Police homicide and arson squad detectives are
investigating a fire in Manorville that killed a person and injured a
man on Wednesday.
Seventh precinct police officers and volunteer firefighters responded
to numerous 911 calls reporting a fire at the home, located at 218
Eastport Manor Road, at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday. When officers and
firefighters arrived, they found Charles Woolsey outside a residence
that was fullly engulfed in flames.
Another woman, who was found inside the residence, was pronounced
dead at the scene; it is not immediately clear if the woman was
Woolsey's wife. A dog was also found covering the woman's body,
according to Suffolk County police; the dog also died at the scene.
Manorville Fire Department's First Assistant Fire Chief Howard Snow
said the woman was found in the kitchen and was badly burned.
Woolsey, 68, a resident of the home, was transported unconscious to
Brookhaven Memorial Hospital Medical Center in East Patchogue for
treatment of smoke inhalation, police said.
Snow said when he arrived on the scene, the gate was locked and
bolted; police were working to open the gate and clear a long driveway
that was littered with wires and poles, he said.
"The fire was fully involved," he said. "It was coming out of the roof and all the windows."
Snow said he saw Woolsey as he was being taken from the house by
Manorville Captain Richard Berni and an Easptort firefighter. "They saw a
shadow in the doorway," he said. "They pulled him out and got him on
stretcher and he was taken to the hospital. He was in and out of
consciousness."
The woman, Snow said, was found on a secondary search of the first floor, with the dog.
Snow said it took approximately an hour and a half to knock down the
fire and firefighters were on the scene until police, the Brookhaven
Town Fire Marshal's Office, and the Suffolk County arson squad took
over.
There is no indication yet of what sparked the blaze, Snow said.
Snow said when he got the initial call, he recognized Woolsey's name
as a "known individual" involved in former incidents. "There has been a
history of problems there," he said.
"The first report that we got said that there might have been booby
traps in his house," Snow said, adding that he was fearful there could
have been explosives or holes in the floor.
"One of the men said they saw a shallow hole with glass covered with
loose leaves outside. We marked it with a a traffic cone," he said.
The interior of the house was "pretty badly damaged," Snow said,
making it difficult to determine whether any booby traps had actually
been set or the report was untrue.
Snow recalled a night approximately ten years ago when he was a
captain in the fire department. "We were there a few years ago and the
guy met us with a gun at the gate," he said. "He was a known individual.
We didn't go on that property without the police department there."
Suffolk County police said that a member of the Manorville Fire
Department told media at the scene the story regarding a previous
incident on the property involving the man, a gun and a fire. The police
were not involved in that incident, police said.
When Suffolk Police Lt. Jack Fitzpatrick spoke at the scene of the
fire Wednesday, he was asked about weapons on the property at the time
of the blaze. Fitzpatrick said police hadn't yet been able to process
the scene, a public information officer for the Suffolk County police
department said.
Snow added, "When I got the call, the first thing I asked is if the
police were on the scene. I'm not putting my guys in jeopardy if we have
an unknown individual who hasn't been stable in the past. Bad stuff
happens to firemen -- and we are all volunteers - and my job is to make
sure everyone goes home safely."
The fire, Snow said, was unusual in that "there was an awful lot of
fire on arrival. That's rare during the day." Normally during daylight
hours so many calls come in that the fire does not spread so quickly.
"It really raises eyebrows," he said.
The Suffolk County Arson Squad is investigating; part of the
investigation will include whether accelerants could have been used,
Snow said.
Mutual aid included East Moriches, Center Moriches, Eastport,
Riverhead, Ridge, and Quogue Fire Departments, Snow said, with Mastic
firefighters standing by at the Manorville firehouse.
"We had a lot of fire. The guys did a great job of knocking it down," he said.
Describing the incident, Snow said it "was bizarre."
In another twist, Woolsey, according to Vanessa Baird-Streeter,
spokesperson for Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone, had been due in
court on Wednesday, the same day as the fire, after being served with
an eviction notice.
According to Baird-Streeter, Woolsey owed $276,842 in back taxes; the
county seized the property and took ownership in 2010, she said, after
he failed to pay taxes since 2005.
"He was given numerous opportunities," Baird-Streeter said, to save his property, incuding a reminder redemption letter.
Woolsey, she said, submitted a redemption application and entered
into a license agreement that would allow him to pay a monthly cost to
stay in his home because he'd indicated that he was going to bankruptcy
court.
"He didn't make good on that," she said.
Next, the county tried to serve Woolsey with a ten-day notice to
vacate the property in November but the processor was unable to access
the house because of the locked gate.
A notice of petition was sent, with proceedings to verify the
petition originally scheduled for Feb. 20.; Woolsey, she said,appeared
in court and asked for a two-week adjournment to March 6. Again, Woolsey
appeared in court and asked for an adjournment to March 13 -- the day
of the fire.
Woolsey, she said, never appeared in court due to the fire.
The property was set to be sold at auction later this year, Baird-Streeter said.
Numerous media photos of the home showed the words "We will not submit" to the threat, painted on the roof of the house.
According to a Newsday report, Woolsey
filed for bankruptcy in May 2011, according to court records. In
October 2011, he filed a federal suit against Suffolk County, asking for
$2 million in losses and $5 million in punitive damages, the Newsday
article stated.
On Feb. 28, U.S. Magistrate Judge Gary Brown issued a recommendation
to dismiss the case, calling it "preposterous." Woolsey had until this
week to file objections, Newday said.
The pending suit, according to Newsday, accused police and others of
trying to suppress his vineyard operation, "Atlantic Vineyards" and
described efforts to photograph vandalism, ward off animals with a
propane cannon and a shotgun, and to record trespassing with security
cameras.
Baird-Streeter said the county tried to work with Woolsey. "It's been
since 2005," she said. "The county is more than willing to work with
people to be able to redeem their property. But it's 2013. He received
an eviction notice at the end of 2012."
One neighbor, who asked not to be identified, said Woolsey was
"eccentric," and had been seen with videocameras, taping neighbors, and
had an air cannon.
http://riverhead.patch.com/articles/chief-on-manorville-fire-we-heard-the-house-was-booby-trapped