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"Let he who is without sin cast the first stone!”
--Jesus (John 8:7)
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“The Monster Reared His Ugly Head” by Jim Paxon
Excerpt from Chapter 6
IGNITION AND THE DEVIL DANCED
…The White Mountains are unusual in that the makeup of the communities demonstrates
wide ethnic diversity, excellent community cooperation and neighborly co-existence.
Fire season 2002 would see many players in the upcoming battles, some who were unlikely
and unwilling participants in a drama that would be played out before the world.
One such player in this unscripted drama is Leonard Gregg, a White Mountain Apache.
He was born in 1971 in Whiteriver and was given up for adoption shortly after birth.
Leonard was very likely born with “F.A.S.” (fetal alcohol syndrome), a condition
caused by a pregnant mother’s use of alcohol, which damages the brain and limits
cognitive skills and reasoning in her unborn baby. Leonard struggled through the
9th grade, when he dropped out of school. He depended very much on his step-mother
and step-brother, Wilson to help him with direction and simple decisions.
Leonard was known as a shy, gentle soul--not a trouble maker. However even as a
child, he was known to have a fascination with fire. On the morning of June 18,
2002, Leonard was reported to have had an argument with his step-mother and stormed
out of their house in Cibeque, a small logging community on the White Mountain Apache
Reservation. The sawmill in Cibeque was the major industry in the area. Most of
the residents were involved in either logging or working at the sawmill that produced
lumber.
Leonard was unable to keep a steady job, but he had advanced through the basic firefighter
training the Bureau of Indian Affairs Forestry and Fire staff put on each year.
Leonard and many others who have been trained, have passed the physical fitness
test, were then issued personal protective equipment and packs and could be called
up and put to work whenever fire conditions were severe. At times crews were organized
and sent out of their home area to fight large fires that require extensive people-power
to dig fire lines, mop-up and do other “non-hotline” fire duties, as well as do
fire rehabilitation work. This is the only way that Leonard had to make money and
he was broke. Leonard needed money to support his girlfriend and her five children.
Sadly, those afflicted with F.A.S. often do things in reaction or on impulse, without
considering long term effects or the bigger picture. They may have an idea of right
or wrong, but any decisions made by them are limited in scope and understanding.
They exhibit naïve ways and often seek resolution of their issues in immediate,
graphic action. Such it was for Leonard on June 18th. The results of his actions
impacted the residents on the reservation and in the high country above the Mogollon
Rim,…for the next several generations!
The first fire allegedly lit in anger by Leonard Gregg was named the Pina Fire,
within the village limits of Cibeque, next to Cibeque Creek. Structural firefighters
and two forestry engines from Ft. Apache Fire responded to this blaze at approximately
10:30 a.m. Ft. Apache Fire Helicopter, H-355 also made water drops to help the firefighters
on the ground. A structural engine from Cibeque also responded, since the fire was
in the community. Firefighters were able to contain the Pina Fire at 10 acres and
the two Forestry engines mopped the Pina Fire up, totally extinguishing any burning
materials, while the structural engines and firemen returned to their station, by
about 3:00 p.m. It was only providence that the first fire was lit near the creek,
which ran water and there was some “green!” The Pina Fire was stopped before it
could do real damage to the town of Cibeque and the surrounding forests.
At approximately 4:11 p.m., Cibeque fireman Gary Thompson looked out the window
of the fire station and saw a definite smoke plume to the north. The only development
in that direction was the Cibeque Rodeo Grounds. Gary called Ft. Apache dispatch
to report the fire. B.I.A. policy restricts structural firefighters from leaving
their district of responsibility, in this case, the community of Cibeque. Their
responsibility, equipment and training is for structure protection,…not wildland
firefighting. The large fire engine that they drive would not have easily maneuvered
up to the rodeo grounds.
At about the same time, Chediski Lookout also spotted the plume of smoke and called
in the location to Ft. Apache dispatch. Shortly after, Limestone Lookout confirmed
the smoke and gave an azimuth (compass reading) to cross reference the location.
With two lookouts giving compass bearings, the location could be plotted (triangulated
on a map) to a point of the closest 10 acres. Since the fire was plotted near the
Cibeque Rodeo Grounds, it was named the “Rodeo Fire.”
Before the fire was reported, Leonard Gregg had told a neighbor that he was soon
to be called to a fire and he needed to get ready for the call to go and help fight
it. Leonard was one of the first “casual firefighters” to be called up and put to
work.
With just one match, the dragon opened one eye and yawned. Before fire fighters
could get to the Cibeque Rodeo Grounds, the dragon was fully awake, in a rather
bad mood at being deprived exercise for so many decades and he was ravenously hungry.
He took a deep breath and exhaled fire and fury. It was now his time and he would
be in control. This was a fire as had not been seen on the reservation, in its entire
133 year history.