Death toll from Palisades and Eaton fires climbs to 25. What we know about those killed
- Share via
The number of confirmed deaths from the devastating Palisades and Eaton fires climbed to 25 as of Tuesday night.
Nine of the victims died in the Palisades fire and 16 in the Eaton fire in Altadena, according to the Los Angeles County medical examiner and L.A. County Sheriff Robert Luna.
Two of the victims have been officially identified by the medical examiner, and The Times has identified 12 others.
Victor Shaw, 66, died from smoke inhalation and burn injuries at his Altadena home, according to thyes, e medical examiner. Charles Mortimer, 84, of Pacific Palisades died in a hospital from a heart attack, smoke inhalation and burns, according to the medical examiner.
Additional Palisades fire victims include avid hang-glider Arthur Simoneau, 69; Australian child actor Rory Sykes, 32; Malibu surfer Randall Miod, 55; and Annette Rossilli, who was in her 80s.
Additional Eaton fire victims include Erliene Kelley, 83; father and son Anthony Mitchell Sr. and Justin Mitchell; Dalyce Curry, 95; Kim Winiecki, 77; Rodney Kent Nickerson, 82; Zhi Feng Zhao, 84; and Evelyn McClendon.
Officials warn that the toll will probably keep rising.
Remembering lives lost in the Eaton and Palisades fires, the most destructive fires in Los Angeles’ history.
Search and recovery operations remain underway in the Eaton and Palisades fire zones using cadaver dogs and grid searches, Luna said at a news conference.
“Unfortunately, every day we’re doing this, we’re running across the remains of individual community members,” Luna said Monday morning.
Searches will take considerable time to complete given the widespread devastation wrought by both blazes and safety challenges of searching in fire zones, the sheriff said.
“A lot of these areas still look like they were hit by a bomb,” Luna said. “There are live electrical wires, gas lines and other hazards.”
Those looking to assist residents affected by the Los Angeles County firestorm have a number of options to donate money, materials or their time.
Crews have to “go from house to house to house” to search for human remains, L.A. County Fire Chief Anthony Marrone said at a recent news conference. So far, more than 12,000 structures are estimated to have been damaged or destroyed in the fires and at least 23 people have been reported missing, said Luna.
Several of the known victims appear to have died after refusing to abandon their homes.
Shaw’s burned body was discovered outside his Altadena home. He was clutching a garden hose.
His sister, Shari Shaw, tried desperately to persuade him to leave the home as flames encroached on his 1960s bungalow in the early hours of Wednesday morning, she said. But he was set on remaining in place, and eventually she had to flee for her own safety.
“He might have felt like he was trying to do the right thing and attempting to put out the flames,” Shari told The Times. “I don’t know if he truly believed he could, but I know he tried.”
The fires in L.A. have caused terrible air quality conditions across the county. Here are ways you can protect yourself, and your children, from the health impacts of wildfire smoke.
Shaw was a former courier driver who was obsessed with Route 66 and loved taking weekend trips to different U.S. cities with his sister, she said.
Kelley also died in the Eaton fire after refusing to leave her home early Wednesday morning, a family member said.
“She was adamant about staying,” her granddaughter Briana Navarro told The Times. “My husband kept asking her if she was sure, if she didn’t want to come with us.”
On Thursday night, police informed Navarro that a body had been found in the rubble that once was her grandmother’s home.
“It’s such a heavy feeling,” she said. “In hindsight, all we keep thinking is, what could I have done differently?”
Kelley was a loving grandmother, retired pharmacist and devoted community volunteer. She bought the home with her late husband in the 1960s and raised two children there. It was the site of many holiday, birthday and anniversary celebrations.
Friends of Simoneau, a hang-gliding hippie from Topanga, believe he, too, died while trying to defend his home.
“His nature is to protect the community, protect his house,” neighbor Susan Dumond told The Times. “He cared about the community a lot, and would do anything to try to help it.”
When the Palisades fire broke out Tuesday, Simoneau told his longtime friend and fellow hang-glider pilot Steve Murillo that he was heading to his home to try to save it.
Simoneau had lived in the area since the late 1990s. Friends described him as “a grown-up hippie” and a “denizen of Topanga” who greeted every neighbor with a grin and a peace sign.
The identity of the remaining victims is unknown, and the medical examiner has warned that it could take weeks in some cases to identify those killed due to the conditions of the bodies.
“Please also keep in mind, traditional means of identification such as fingerprinting and visual identification may not be available and will add more time for naming these decedents,” stated the medical examiner.
As firefighters continue to battle multiple major wildfires, The Times has compiled a list of resources to help.
The updated death toll places the ongoing fire siege among the deadliest in California history.
The state’s deadliest wildfire remains the Camp fire, which leveled the town of Paradise in Butte County in 2018, killing at least 85 people.
The second-deadliest was the Griffith Park fire of 1933, in which 29 people died, followed by the Oakland-Berkeley hills fire of 1991, with 25 fatalities, and the Tubbs fire in Napa and Sonoma counties in 2017, with 22 deaths.
The Palisades fire was at 23,713 acres and 18% contained Tuesday evening, while the Eaton fire was at 14,117 acres and 35% contained, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
Times staff writers Grace Toohey and Andrew J. Campa contributed to this report.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.