The extension cord which the chandlers were using ran through the bathroom doorway, and every time the door was opened/closed, it wore off some of the plastic coating/insulation on the cord. Finally, overloaded and striped of its protective insulation, the cord sparked and started the fire. The fire wasn't electrical, it was a horde fire. If the fire had been electrical, the power would have been shut off much sooner than it actually was. If it hadn't been for that stupid bitch Barb's hording, and the general negligence/stupidity of the Chandlers, the fire never would have happened. All of Barb's shit she bought from goodwill over the years ended up burning down her family's home. It says something that it took the fire department about an hour and a half to put the fire out.So the fire burned for a couple hours? From the comments it sounds like that place got torched pretty good. This is why I have a few fire extinguishers.
@skyraider91 is there an investigation with hot cocks for us?
So, does that mean they lose out on insurance money? After all, they caused the cord to degrade through their own negligence instead of being the fault of the machine.The extension cord which the chandlers were using ran through the bathroom doorway, and every time the door was opened/closed, it wore off some of the plastic coating/insulation on the cord. Finally, overloaded and striped of its protective insulation, the cord sparked and started the fire. The fire wasn't electrical, it was a horde fire. If the fire had been electrical, the power would have been shut off much sooner than it actually was. If it hadn't been for that stupid bitch Barb's hording, and the general negligence/stupidity of the Chandlers, the fire never would have happened. All of Barb's shit she bought from goodwill over the years ended up burning down her family's home. It says something that it took the fire department about an hour and a half to put the fire out.
To be fair, my uncle was a firefighter (rest his soul) and they never left as soon as a fire stops. They have to watch it for smoldering and all that. With a hoard like 14BC was, they probably needed to stay a little longer than normal. I'd say it probably burned for an hour. And the rest of the time was them making sure everyone was ok, and the smoldering stopped, and all that. I'm surprised that it's not mentioned that the firefighter hurt himself; you'll notice an emergency vehicle was called (EMT) but that's what happens when you call 911. I do like the "need more manpower" calls. You know if was because of the hoard.So the fire burned for a couple hours? From the comments it sounds like that place got torched pretty good. This is why I have a few fire extinguishers.
@skyraider91 is there an investigation with hot cocks for us?
Ok. No. I'm stopping this future debate right now. This has been discussed to death and I'm done. No. They will still get insurance money. The insurance company doesn't care the why or how unless it's A) arsine and not an accident or B) if it states in their policy that they aren't covered in negligence cases (Which as a law student I can tell you is stupid and rarely is on policies. If you sign a policy with this clause, you will never get coverage).So, does that mean they lose out on insurance money? After all, they caused the cord to degrade through their own negligence instead of being the fault of the machine.
It mentions "1 Patient" in EMS R401 heading to MJH (likely the hospital) on the second page. I'm assuming that was the firefighter.To be fair, my uncle was a firefighter (rest his soul) and they never left as soon as a fire stops. They have to watch it for smoldering and all that. With a hoard like 14BC was, they probably needed to stay a little longer than normal. I'd say it probably burned for an hour. And the rest of the time was them making sure everyone was ok, and the smoldering stopped, and all that. I'm surprised that it's not mentioned that the firefighter hurt himself; you'll notice an emergency vehicle was called (EMT) but that's what happens when you call 911. I do like the "need more manpower" calls. You know if was because of the hoard.
Okay, thank you for that. Been looking into this and found out that, in order to prevent future claims, the insurance company can issue conditions for the Chandlers to live by if they want to continue the policy. Chris and Barb fail to comply, insurance can and likely will walk.Ok. No. I'm stopping this future debate right now. This has been discussed to death and I'm done. No. They will still get insurance money. The insurance company doesn't care the why or how unless it's A) arsine and not an accident or B) if it states in their policy that they aren't covered in negligence cases (Which as a law student I can tell you is stupid and rarely is on policies. If you sign a policy with this clause, you will never get coverage).
The extension cord which the chandlers were using ran through the bathroom doorway, and every time the door was opened/closed, it wore off some of the plastic coating/insulation on the cord. Finally, overloaded and striped of its protective insulation, the cord sparked and started the fire. The fire wasn't electrical, it was a horde fire. If the fire had been electrical, the power would have been shut off much sooner than it actually was. If it hadn't been for that stupid bitch Barb's hording, and the general negligence/stupidity of the Chandlers, the fire never would have happened. All of Barb's shit she bought from goodwill over the years ended up burning down her family's home. It says something that it took the fire department about an hour and a half to put the fire out.
I hope someone can translate Firefighter-ese for those of us having trouble understanding?