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Fire crews' Palisades concerns hidden
Los Angeles Times
|November 12, 2025
LAFD knew of complaints about Lachman blaze mop-up but said nothing, as victims for months questioned how the inferno started
"WE WON'T leave a fire that has any hot spots," then-Chief Kristin Crowley said on Jan. 16.
ALLEN J. SCHABEN Los Angeles Times
For months, as victims pleaded for information, the Los Angeles Fire Department kept secret that its firefighters were ordered to stop mop-up operations on a small brush fire that continued to smolder and reignited days later into the massive Palisades fire.
At least one department official learned that a battalion chief had directed the firefighters to pack up their hoses and leave the scene of the Lachman fire Jan. 2, even though they complained that the ground was still smoking in places and rocks remained hot to the touch, according to a source who was briefed on the matter in June.
But the department did not include that finding, or any detailed examination of the reignition, in its after-action report on the Jan. 7 Palisades fire — or otherwise make the information public — despite victims demanding answers for months about how the blaze started and whether more could have been done to prevent it.
The report, which was released last month and intended to identify shortcomings in the LAFD’s preparedness and response, only briefly mentioned the prior blaze, even though its role in starting the Palisades fire was clear to firefighters. According to the report, on the morning of Jan. 7, an LAFD captain called Fire Station 23 — one of two stations in Pacific Palisades — to say that the Lachman fire had started up again.
Despite this, LAFD officials were emphatic early on that the Lachman fire was fully extinguished.
"We won't leave a fire that has any hot spots," Kristin Crowley, the fire chief at the time, said at a community meeting Jan. 16, after the Palisades fire killed 12 people and destroyed thousands of homes.
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