> How did the 19 firefighters die?

How did the 19 firefighters die?

Posted at: 2015-04-20 
This is so sad, our thoughts are with their families and communities in Arizona. It seems that the flames were too much for the fire blankets the Fire Crew cover themselves with when they become trapped. The Guys lie down on the ground and cover themselves until the fire passes them by. But something went wrong in this instance. Arizona Authorities will conducting a full enquiry. True hero's.

Yesterday evening, 19 wildland firefighters from the Granite Mountain Hotshots, an elite 20-member crew based out of Prescott, Arizona, died fighting the Yarnell Hill Fire, a 2,000-acre blaze southwest of Prescott. This is the biggest wildland firefighting tragedy since 1994, when 14 firefighters were killed on Colorado’s South Canyon Fire, and it recalls the Mann Gulch blaze that burned over 12 smokejumpers in 1949. The reports are incomplete, but this is what’s known.

On Friday, a lightning strike ignited the Yarnell Hill fire in chaparral and grass a mile and half outside of the 650-person town of Yarnell. The fire grew to 800 acres. Because of its proximity to town, it was designated a national priority and an emergency management team and 200 firefighters―state, city, and federal―were brought in. Like most of the firefighters on scene, the Granite Mountain Hotshots, the only city-funded hotshot crew in the nation (most are federal or state), were tasked with protecting houses and building a fuel break along the blaze’s eastern flank.

Around 3:30 P.M. on Sunday, with temperatures in the 100s and humidity in single digits, a thunderstorm moving northeast to southwest over Prescott, 30 miles away, funneled 40-50 miles per hour winds down canyons and directly over the blaze. Reports suggest the hotshots were building a fuel break on the edge of the flames when the winds hit and the fire jumped their line. At some point soon after, the crew deployed their shelters, aluminum pup tents that deflect heat and are used only in the most dire of situations.

The Los Angeles Times reports that the nearby Wickenburg Community Hospital was told to expect injured firefighters. Shortly after, they were told none were coming. The entire crew―one hotshot had not gone out on the line that shift―had been burned over and killed. Some two hundreds homes were also lost

I read the story online and I am still confused on how this happened. Something just seems sketchy on how this could happen. If I was a conspirator I would believe the government got rid of them when they discovered how the fire really started.

They were a hotshot crew placed ahead of the fire's projected path to create fire breaks. The fire changed and the crew was overrun by flames. Their protections weren't enough to save them.

Rude, Kevin. Many people have questions about exactly how this tragedy happened. Not everyone has a TV, and not everyone who does have a TV has cable, so they have to wait for the evening news at 11:00 P.M. for news.

Try watching the news.

From the fire