Pubdate: Tue, 17 Oct 2006 Source: Chronicle Herald (CN NS) Copyright: 2006 The Halifax Herald Limited Contact: http://thechronicleherald.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180 Author: Dan Arsenault, Crime Reporter DARTMOUTH STOREOWNER PUZZLED BY FIREBOMBING With soot making a black mark on his cheek, the owner of a hip-hop clothing business that had two stores firebombed early Sunday said he's doesn't know why someone would target his stores. "I don't really know much about it -- why it happened," Steven Douglas Skinner, the owner of Underground Jungle at 169 Main St., said outside his Dartmouth shop. "If they (police) figure that out, they'll probably warn me." He said he doesn't feel personally threatened or concerned for his safety. At 4:45 a.m. Sunday, Halifax Regional Police and Halifax firefighters rushed to the burning Dartmouth store where they found an incendiary device. Just under an hour later, word of another fire drew firefighters and police to another Underground Jungle location at 8 Oland Cres. in Bayers Lake Business Park. No one was hurt but both fires are considered arson. Mr. Skinner, 33, was charged with weapons and drug offences in 2003, but they were thrown out of court after a Nova Scotia Supreme Court judge questioned a regional police officer's testimony and said cops unlawfully searched Mr. Skinner's home. On Monday, Mr. Skinner denied having any involvement in the drug trade and said he doubts the fires are connected to the 2003 charges. "I was charged with drugs and weapons charges, which I was found not guilty of for a reason, because I was not guilty. It (the fires) doesn't have anything to do with that in any way." Asked if a marijuana-leaf poster in his storefront window might make people think otherwise, he laughed about the dubious possibility anti-marijuana terrorists were responsible and said, "We don't sell marijuana here; we sell papers for tobacco use only." In addition to clothes and rolling papers, Mr. Skinner's shop advertised phone cards, a cash mart and mixed CDs. There were two cleanup company vans parked outside the store Monday morning, as well as an insurance company investigator. Mr. Skinner praised the police and fire service response, but said he doesn't know anything about their investigation. He also doesn't know if he'll be able to reopen his business. "There's so much smoke damage. Any (remaining) clothes are going to be destroyed, just from the smoke damage. We're going to see how bad it is and how the insurance comes through." Regional police spokesman Const. Jeff Carr said police are still in the early stages of their work. "Investigators have spoken with the owner of the business." He said at this time police are not looking for any suspects or suspect vehicles. He said police are still working on another suspicious fire, at 37 Everette St. in Woodside, early Saturday morning that seriously injured two women. "There's no evidence to indicate that the two (fire investigations) are associated at this point, but we won't ignore that possibility," Const. Carr said. The victims in that fire, women aged 45 and 50, had their conditions upgraded to good and serious Monday. That fire started when someone tossed a Molotov cocktail through an apartment window. Like the other fires, police don't think the house was chosen at random. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek