Family in limbo after suspected arson in Logan neighborhood leaves home in ruins
The books, blankets, teddy bears and clothes. Baby photos and birth certificates. Dressers and bed frames. Purses and wallets. Money, car keys, her daughter's birthday present -- all reduced to a sprawling wave of blackened ash, with the occasional jagged edge from a piece of furniture. And a charred dream car named Marsha in the front yard (now called Marshmallow).
Sifting through the rubble one afternoon in December, it's apparent the fire was hot, fast and furious. The blaze, reeking of gasoline, burned not only her home at
"This was the living room," the 41-year-old mother said, standing where her dining room table should be. Water droplets from the scorched second-floor fell onto her blonde hair pulled tight in a pony tail. "It was beautiful."
Two months later, Howe-Kizzar is still unsure how to move on from that night. With no cash, renter's insurance or assets -- save for a burnt Marshmallow she traded in for an old motor home -- she's unsure what to do with her time and energy.
So she's taken to staying in her newly purchased but old camper in the home's backyard, spending her days sifting through the rubble, and nights huddled around a small space heater. Her kids, meanwhile, sleep at a friend's house along with her husband, from whom she's separated.
So far, she's found an old portfolio from her time as a journalist and a somehow unburned box of jewelry. She keeps old baby clothes she's scavenged in a large, plastic Ziploc bag. They all reek of fire.
"There's no book for help or where to start," she said weeks ago, her eyes tearing up. "I just figured shoes. So the kids got shoes."
It's a temporary gig, and one that's quickly nearing its deadline. For the past few weeks, she's received several notices to vacate from her landlords -- property owners Vince and
The power cord she runs from a friend's nearby apartment complex keeps getting cut, too. She suspects the landlords are behind it, but they deny any involvement.
"Oh my goodness,"
Dressel said she can't move forward with a planned demolition until Howe-Kizzar is off the property. After that, the two homes will become empty lots.
"I'm not sure what's going to happen from here," she said. "We're just trying to move on."
When the Dressels first arrived at the home early on
"This was one of the first things to go," she said, pointing to a space near the open hole where glass should be. "It was popping."
From there, it tore through the home that was built in the early 1900s, room by room, moving up the walls and into empty bedrooms on the second floor. Howe-Kizzar can still remember the smell of smoke -- the size of the rock and the noise it made as it bounced off her 14-year-old son's bedroom window, while she stood outside begging him to wake up and come downstairs.
Howe-Kizzar and her four children -- ages 6, 8, 14 and 16 -- were able to escape, along with her friend,
Nobody in the other home was injured, either. The only people harmed were a pair of firefighters, who were hurt by falling debris. They were treated and released from a hospital.
From the onset, Howe-Kizzar and the Dressels suspected arson. The likely culprit, they think, is an ex-boyfriend of Howe-Kizzar's best friend, who was allegedly threatened by the man hours before the fire was started.
The 38- year-old, who is in the
Howe-Kizzar said she's viewed the video but signed an agreement saying she wouldn't disclose the details. The Dressels, too, said they've seen video of the arson.
Thrasher, who was staying at the original home, was also up when the fire started. He reported walking out onto the balcony about 30 minutes before
Howe-Kizzar told investigators the suspect also has a history of domestic violence. She said he had recently gotten out of jail and had become enraged after learning her friend had started dating someone else.
Later, the friend told Howe-Kizzar that a few days before the fire she had also filed a police report against the man, saying he was stalking her and assaulted her days earlier. In that incident, records say, he allegedly dragged her out of a car in the middle of the street, but she was able to escape.
The woman also provided police screen shots of chats with the suspect over
"Regardless of what (sic) you're coming with me," he wrote. "I'm very afraid right now of doing some real crazy (things) I don't want to do (sic) that's not worth it."
That same day at about
On
The man has not been arrested or charged in the arson investigation. As a matter of policy,
For Howe-Kizzar, it makes no difference whether he's charged. She and her children are still without a house, and soon she'll be without a place to park what little home she has left.
"It is what it is," she said. "But here I still am. And here we still are in limbo."
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