Woman in firefighter murder case had insurance payouts for blazes, analysis shows
And in four cases, there has been an insurance payout, usually for much more than the purchase price of the business.
It's a pattern that prosecutors emphasized Thursday in the fourth day of Nguyen's arson and murder trial for the 2015 fire that resulted in the deaths of two
In all, Nguyen has benefited from
Nguyen has operated at least five nail salons from
With the others, the signatories have included her son and her boyfriend. She ran each of them but she usually didn't receive a paycheck or file a W-2 tax form. Yet the proceeds of each business appear to have been used for personal expenses, Poirier said.
Then there would be a fire or a burglary and an insurance claim.
"She would subsequently use these payouts to purchase a new company and start over," Poirier testified.
But the latest setback for one of Nguyen's salons was a catastrophic fire that destroyed a commercial and residential building in the 2600 block of
Investigators pinpointed the origin to the storeroom of
Here's what Poirier found in her investigation:
-- Nguyen and her ex-husband purchased a salon called PS Nails in
-- The AV Nails salon in
-- Perfect Nails in
--
--
In
There might have been another big insurance payout when the salon was destroyed by the deadly
In all, Poirier found a total of 14 insurance claims associated with Nguyen, including personal insurance claims such as an auto accident and auto theft.
One was for a fire in her brother's house, where she was living for a time. Unbeknownst to the brother, Poirier said, Nguyen had herself added to his homeowner policy and later named herself head of household. She received an insurance claim for
Over the years, Poirier said, Nguyen has overstated business assets for insurance purposes and understated them for other purposes. She has received about
In cross-examination, defense attorney
She also noted that the payouts came from some large insurers like Farmer's,
"A major insurance company is savvy enough to figure out when somebody is pulling a scam," Hastings said.
Assistant
Finding a pattern
The first investigation into the fire at the
A second investigation concluded the cause was "undetermined."
A third investigation concluded the fire was deliberately set.
Nguyen's arson charge for that pales in comparison to the murder charges she also faces. But if prosecutors are correct, it shows a pattern of behavior.
Nguyen allegedly started a fire in her nail salon on
Similarly, she allegedly started the fire at her nail salon on
Nobody died in that fire. But after Nguyen was charged in the
Agent
Nguyen decided to close early that day and drove her two employees home.
Strolling past the now-closed nail salon, she was shocked to notice high flames at one of the work stations. It was Nguyen's station.
Vaughn called 911 and the Lee's
It was clear the fire originated inside a cabinet at the work station and then burned up and out.
Burgess found the remains of a power strip that had been fused by the heat to a nail-polish removal appliance. He had extensive training in fire science but this was his first case in a commercial establishment. He found numerous code violations in the shop such as power strips "daisy chained" together and spliced electrical cords.
Burgess concluded the fire was possibly caused by electrical failure. He classified it as accidental.
For whatever reason, that didn't happen.
But in
The power strip had been a suspect. The original, destroyed one was no longer available but others of the same make and model could be tested.
But the cabinet at the nail salon had acetone in it, a flammable liquid commonly used in removing nail polish. Further tests found that, with an intentional ignition and with or without acetone, flames like those seen by Vaughn could easily be produced within 10 minutes.
Zornes said that confirmed his hypothesis that the
Defense attorney Hastings noted that none of the lab's procedures tested malfunctioning power strip with acetone or other flammable liquids found in salons.
Related coverage from The Star:
A loud crack and an avalanche of bricks -- a KC firefighter recalls escaping death
New report cites missteps that led to deaths of two
The Star's 'Fatal Echoes' series
When fire departments fail to learn from each other's mistakes, firefighters pay the price.
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