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Home / Neighborhood / Los Angeles / Firefighter killed in shooting at LA County fire station in Agua Dulce

Firefighter killed in shooting at LA County fire station in Agua Dulce

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As a Los Angeles County Fire Department captain lay in a hospital in critical condition with multiple gunshot wounds, a procession to the coroner’s office was held for another firefighter early this morning following a double shooting inside the Agua Dulce fire station — a shooting committed by a gunman identified as an off-duty colleague at Fire Station 81.

Authorities said the gunman later barricaded himself inside his home in nearby Acton and set it on fire before he was found dead of an apparent self- inflicted gunshot wound to the head.

The procession from the fire station to the Los Angeles County coroner’s office in Boyle Heights took place after midnight.

Earlier, at a candlelight vigil in Acton on Tuesday night, the firefighter specialist who was killed was identified as Tory Carlon, ABC7 reported. The fire department has not publicly identified either shooting victim.

The vigil was put together by members of the Los Angeles Fire Department, and about 200 people attended, ABC7 said.

The shooting occurred about 10:55 a.m. Tuesday at Fire Station 81 in the 8700 block of Sierra Highway, Chief Daryl Osby said. The 44-year-old firefighter who died was shot multiple times in the upper body and was pronounced dead at the scene, authorities said.

The fire captain, 54, suffered multiple gunshot wounds and was taken to Henry Mayo Newhall Hospital, where he was listed in critical but stable condition with stable vital signs.

“I stand here with a heavy heart,” Osby said at a Tuesday afternoon news conference. “Today is truly a sad day and a tragic day for the Los Angeles County Fire Department. And I stand here from the perspective that you see other people do, but I just never thought it would be me or our fire department family that would suffer this type of loss.

“… I recognize and we all recognize that the work that our firefighters and our firefighter-paramedics do is a dangerous and arduous profession. And many times they put their lives in danger to protect and serve others when they receive 911 calls for service. But yet, as a fire chief, I never thought that when our firefighters face danger that they would face that danger in one of our community fire stations.”

The gunman was identified as an off-duty county firefighter who also worked at Fire Station 81.

According to sheriff’s Lt. Brandon Dean, witnesses to the shooting were quickly able to identify the gunman and his vehicle to responding deputies, who tracked him to his home in the 2600 block of Bent Spur Drive in Acton. Authorities said the suspect barricaded himself inside the home and set it on fire.

Uncertain of the gunman’s status, fire crews were unable to immediately respond to the blaze, and the flames chewed through the sprawling home. As the fire raged, sheriff’s crews spotted a man in the backyard of the home with an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head. The body was seen in a seated, slumped-over position inside an empty swimming pool.

Fire crews eventually were able to douse the flames from the air, making a series of water drops. That eventually allowed sheriff’s deputies to access the property and confirm the person seen in the pool was dead.

Dean initially told reporters that deputies were confident the person found was the gunman, but they could not say 100% until they were able fully access the property. A short time later, a county fire department public information officer confirmed to reporters outside the home that the body was the suspect being sought.

There was no immediate word on a motive for the shooting. Osby said only that the gunman was a firefighter-engineer, but he would not say if he was facing any internal disciplinary action that might have precipitated the gunfire.

The deadly shooting rocked the fire department, and left Osby at times fighting to maintain his composure as he reported the details.

“This morning when I received the news, it was some of the worst news that I’ve heard in my career,” Osby said. “And as a fire chief, I’ve dealt with a lot of death and a lot of fallen members of my department. And I’ve always prayed that we would never have a line-of-duty death. I never thought that if it occurred that it would occur in this fashion.

“I know that as firefighters we are in a profession of providing assistance to others,” he added. “But I ask that in this particular situation, that we ask you for your support, that we ask you for your assistance, that we ask you for your prayers in our time of need.”

Osby said the firefighter who was killed had been with the department for more than 20 years and was a career firefighter, starting in a U.S. Forest Service Explorer Program. He described him as “truly dedicated, one of our better firefighters, amazing, and a true loss to our department.”

Osby said he activated the department’s chaplain program, peer-support team and mental-health specialists to offer support for affected firefighters and their families.

Los Angeles County Supervisor Hilda Solis, who chairs the Board of Supervisors, wrote on Twitter, “My most sincerest condolences to the family of the firefighter who was tragically killed in today’s shooting at Fire Station 81 in Agua Dulce. My thoughts are with our @LACOFD family. At my direction, flags will be flown half-staff at all County buildings.”

County Supervisor Janice Hahn called the shooting “an unspeakable tragedy.”

“The work our firefighters do is dangerous,” she wrote on Twitter. “They go to work every day knowing they may be asked to put their lives on the line to protect others. Between emergency calls, the fire station must have felt like their safe haven. Unfortunately that sense of safety has now been shattered.

“But I know, in spite of the violence today in Agua Dulce, our LA County firefighters will continue their unwavering commitment to protecting the rest of us and we thank them for that.”

Edward Kelly, president of the International Association of Fire Fighters, the union for county firefighters, said the union is also offering peer-support and other services to affected members.

“Fire fighters leave their homes and loved ones every day knowing the risks involved in our profession,” he said. “The challenges of being a fire fighter or paramedic include seeing and experiencing some of life’s most horrifying circumstances. Nothing, however, can adequately prepare anyone for today’s tragedy.”

Editor’s Note: Originally posted June 1, 2021 at 1:55 p.m. / Updated June 2, 2021 at 9:27 a.m. with quotes and information from afternoon press conference

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