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Cdi 7 Lesson 7
Cdi 7 Lesson 7
This chapter will present and point out what are the reasons that contribute to the spread of fire. There are three
principal causes of fire namely: men, women, and children. This statement still has considerable significance because
most of the more than one and a quarter million building fires that occur every year in the United States and Asian
countries particularly the Philippines are cause by human errors either of omission or commission. For that reason
considerable importance is placed upon educating the public along fire prevention lines or programs. For many years we
have referred to the “causes” of fire. This was not always strictly correct. For example, flammable liquids have been listed
as on of the causes of fire, yet flammable liquids cannot alone cause a fire unless some ignition source is provided, and
one may well ask, “What caused the fire, the flammable liquid or the ignition source?
In the United, States, the investigation of fires for their causes and the detection and apprehension of arsonists is
correctly the function of the fire department. Arson and the malicious activities of many persons cause a significant impact
each year in this country and abroad. There are many motives that contribute to these crimes.
The legal authority for investigating fires and prosecuting people who arranged for a fire is usually given to the
State Fire Marshall. But proving a case of arson against one or more persons is another matter entirely, and may not be
possible no matter how convinced the investigator may be of the guilt. The choice of whether to prosecute is up to the
District Attorney’s office as part of the criminal justice system.
In the Philippines, under the DILG or PNP Law, the Bureau of Fire Protection and Public Safety is the main
government agency responsible for the prevention and suppression of all destructive fires on buildings, houses and other
structures, forest, land transportation vehicles and equipment, ships or vessels docked at piers or major seaports,
petroleum industry installations, plane crashes and other similar incidents, as well as the enforcement of the Fire Code
(P.D. 1185) and other related law.
It has the major power to investigate all causes of fires, and if necessary, file the proper complaints with the
proper authority that has jurisdiction over the case (R.A. 6975, sec 54).
1. Burning - there must be burning or changing, i.e., the fiber of the wood must be destroyed or decomposed, its
identity or physical state changed.
3. Motive - the moving cause that induces the commission of the crime.
5. Intent - the purpose or design with which the act is done and involves the will to do the act
Most of the physical evidence in arson is often destroyed. To prove arson was committed, Corpus Delicti (the
Body of the Crime) must be shown and the identity of the arsonist must be established.
Factors involved
1. Burning
that there was fire that may be shown by direct testimony of complainant, firemen responding to the
crime, and other witnesses of the fire incident. Burned parts of the building may also indicate location.
2. Crimina1 Design
a willful and intent action done must be shown. The presence of incendiary devices, flammable
substances/materials such as gasoline and kerosene may indicate that the fire is not accidental.
3. Evidence of Intent
when valuables were removed from the building before the fire, the ill-feeling between the accused and
the occupants of the building involved or burned - absence of effort to put off the fire and such other indications.
This occurs during the free-burning stage of the fire, or when it undergoes pyrolytic decomposition or heated gases move
upward on the walls leaving a burnt pattern.
• His identity;
• What attracted his attention;
• The time of observation;
• His position in relation to the fire at the time of his observation;
• Exact location of the blaze;
• The rapidity or the speed of spread of the fire;
• Color of flame and odor if he/she is in position to observe this;
• Size and intensity;
• Any other person in the vicinity seen by the witness.
Motive
• Pyros (pyromaniac)
• Psychos
In determining motive, the arson investigator concentrates on the three (3) Major Factors
namely:
1. Point of Origin
2. Modus Operandi
3. Beneficiaries
1. Economic Gain
• Insurance fraud - benefits
• Desire to dispose merchandise - loss of market value being out of season, lack of raw materials, over supply of
merchandise.
3. Concealment of Crime
when the purpose of hiding a crime or committing a crime, arson was used as a means.
4. Pyromania
the uncontrollable impulse of a person to burn anything without any motivation.
• Abnormal youth - epileptics, imbeciles and morons
• Hero type - a person responsible setting a building on fire and pretends to discover it, turn
the alarm or make some rescue works to appear as “hero”.
• Drug Addicts and Alcoholics
• Sexual Deviates and Perverts
This identification results from the full development of leads, clues and traces, the testimony of persons particularly
eyewitnesses and the development of expert testimony.
These signs maybe obvious that the first fireman at the fire scene will suspect arson:
1. Burned Building
the type of building may indicate a set fire under certain circumstances. A fire of considerable size at the time the first
apparatus arrives at the scene is suspicious if a modern concrete or semi-concrete building is involved.
2. Separate fires
when two or more fire breaks out within a building, the building is certainly suspicious.
3. Color of smoke
some fire burn with little or no smoke but there are exceptions to this. The observation of the smoke must be made at the
start of the fire since once the fire has consumed a major proportion; the value of the smoke is lost, because the smoke
will not indicate the material used by the arsonist.
• When white smoke appears before the water from the fire hose comes in contact with the
fire, it indicates humid materials burning. Examples: hay, vegetables, phosphorous with garlic
odor.
• Biting smoke indicates lack of air but if accompanied large flames it indicates
petroleum products and rubber.
• Reddish-brown smoke indicates nitrocellulose. SI,
5. Color of Flame
The color of the flame is a good indicator of the intensity of the fire, it is an important factor in
determining incendiarism.
• A reddish glow indicates heat of about 5000 ºC., a real light red about 1000 ºC
• Red flames indicate presence of petroleum products
• Blue flame indicates use of alcohol as accelerant
6. Size of fire
The size of fire is important when correlated with the type of alarm, the time received and the time of arrival of the first
responder at the fire scene. Fire makes what might be termed a normal progress. Such progress can be estimated after
an examination of the material burned in the building, and the normal ventilation offered to the fire. The time element and
the degree of headway much by the flames became important factors to determine possible incendiarism.
7. Direction of Travel
While it is admitted that no two fires burn in identical fashion, yet it can be shown that the fire makes normal progress
through various types of building. Considering the type of construction, the building materials, combustibility of contents,
channel of ventilation and circumstances surrounding the sending of alarm, an experienced investigator can determine
whether a fire has spread abnormally fast.
8. Intensity
The degree of heat given off by a fire and the color of its flame often times indicate that some accelerant has been added
to the material normally present in a building and the investigator must look further for more evidence used of such
accelerant. Difficulty in extinguishing the fire is often a lead to suspect presence of such fluid or liquid as gasoline and
kerosene.
9. Odor
The odor of gasoline, alcohol, kerosene and other flammable liquids which are often used as an accelerant is a
characteristics, and often times an arsonists is trapped because of this tell tale sign. Most of fire-setters are inclined to use
substances which will make the blaze certain and at the same time burn up any evidence of their crime.
other business establishments remove a major portion of their content or replace valuable merchandise with, out of style
articles.
Locked doors and obstructed entrance and passageways are sometimes point to an attempt to impeded firemen in their
operation to put out the fire. Doors and windows showing signs of forced entry may point to arson preceded by burglary or
arson by someone without a key to the premises.
Interested by-standers of familiar faces and discovery of some objects which might be part of a mechanical fire-setting
device among debris.
Arson
It is the intentional or malicious destruction of property by fire.
2. The law presumes that a fire is accidental, hence criminal designs must be shown.
Setting fires to any buildings, farmhouse, warehouse, hut shelter, or vessel in port, knowing it to be occupied at the time
by one or more person/s;
Building burned is a public and purpose is to destroy evidence kept therein to be used in legislative, judicial or
administrative proceedings, irrespective of the damage, if the evidence is to be used against the dependant of any crime
punishable under existing law;
Burned building is a public and the purpose is to destroy evidence kept therein to be used in instituting prosecution for
punishment of violators of law, irrespective of the amount of damage.
Elements
1. Burning of any uninhabited hut, storehouse, barn, shed, or any other property;
2. Value of property does not exceed twenty five pesos(25.00).
3. Under circumstances clearly excluding all danger of the fire spreading.
1. explosion;
2. discharge of electric current;
3. inundation, sinking or stranding of a vessel;
4. taking up the rails from a railway, track;
5. malicious changing of railway signals for the safety of moving train;
6. by using any other agency or means of destruction;
7. destroying telegraph wires and telegraph post or those other communication system.
Burning of ones own property as a means of committing Arson. This article punishes the burning of one’s, own property
for the purpose of committing arson or great destruction of property.
Setting fire to property exclusively owned by the offender. This article provides the purpose of the offender to: