Two years since Arlington Avenue fire

CHARLESTON, W.Va. –  Monday marks the two-year anniversary of the deadly Arlington Ave. fire in Charleston that killed two adults and seven children.

Flames engulfed the home in the early morning hours of March 24, 2012. A Charleston fire house was just two blocks away. However, by the time firefighters arrive on scene minutes later flames were shooting out of the windows of the two-story house and thick black smoke curled from the roof.

Investigators say the fire burned quickly. There were several candles in the house and lots of blankets blocking openings to keep things warm.

Killed in the fire were Alisha Carter-Camp, 26, and her three children, Keahana, 8, “BJ”, 7, and Jeremiah, 3, were found inside their burning house, Carter-Camp’s boyfriend Alexander Seals, 24, and his two children Gabrielle, 5, and McKenzie, 3 and Carter-Camp’s nephew and niece, Elijah, 3, and Emmanuel Jones-Isabell, 20 months.

The only survivor was Latisha Jones Isabelle, the sister of Carter-Camp. She was outside smoking a cigarette around 3 a.m. when she noticed flames and ran to a neighbor’s house to call for help.

The entire family was staying at the Arlington Ave. home after a birthday celebration for Carter-Camp. The house had three smoke detectors, however, none were working.

It remains the deadliest fire in Charleston history. What was left of the house stood for 17 months before it was demolished back in August.

 





More News

News
Governor Justice endorses Moore Capito to succeed him
Capito is a former House Judiciary Committee chairman, son of the U.S. senator and grandson of three-term Gov. Arch Moore.
April 18, 2024 - 6:27 pm
News
WVU Medicine announces major capital investment plan
Health system plans $400 million investment.
April 18, 2024 - 2:41 pm
News
Boone County woman charged in teenage daughter's death
Court documents say a 14-year old victim was found dead in her home in an "emaciated, skeletal state"
April 18, 2024 - 2:12 pm
News
Rep Miller supports aid for Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan, plus TikTok bill and keeping the speaker on the job
Miller, who represents counties in the southern half of West Virginia, said she supports each of the bills in the package -- plus keeping Johnson on the job.
April 18, 2024 - 2:08 pm


Your Comments