Pubdate: Thu, 27 May 2010 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2010 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www2.canada.com/calgaryherald/letters.html Website: http://www.calgaryherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Author: Richard Cuthbertson, Calgary Herald Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada) GROW OP BLAZE DESTROYED FIVE HOMES Fire Victims Relieved As Suspect Pleads Guilty In the hour after he first discovered the flames tearing through his home, Russell Hugh McDougall made 25 calls on his cellphone. None of those were to 911. Nor did the 33-year-old alert any of his neighbours as the blaze began to whip down the street, demolishing five homes and severely damaging three others. Instead, McDougall left the scene in the early hours of Dec. 5 -- his Citadel neighbours barely escaping as their homes were torched during a ferocious winter storm that left fire trucks stuck in snow as they desperately tried to reach the scene. This is according to a statement of facts read in provincial court Wednesday as McDougall pleaded guilty to eight counts of arson by negligence, and one count of producing marijuana. The blaze had started in McDougall's home and was likely caused by electrical issues related to the marijuana grow operation the man had in his basement. The blaze was mammoth, soon carving a wave of destruction along Citadel Forest Place N.W. after it started around 3:45 a.m. It left almost a dozen people homeless, caused $5 million in damage, and killed three dogs and eight cats. "The fire spread quickly to neighbouring houses," Crown prosecutor Bina Border said. The victims are still rebuilding their lives. Those include Kim Stobbe, who was living with her daughter and parents in one of the homes that was destroyed. She's relieved McDougall pleaded guilty. "It's nice that he actually did and admitted to his faults and hopefully he'll get some good jail time for it," she said Wednesday in an interview. The family has credited Kim's daughter, Carlie, with saving them from the fire after she awoke in the middle of the night and alerted the household. The first three months after the blaze were particularly draining, Kim Stobbe said. She was laid off from her job a couple weeks after the fire and it took time to sort things out with the insurance company. Everything they lost had to be itemized, right down to how many pairs of socks and shoes they owned. But things are looking up now, she said. Stobbe is going back to school on Monday to study to become a medical administrative assistant. Carlie still has trouble sleeping, her mother said, but is doing well otherwise. They live with Stobbe's parents in a leased home in another part of Calgary. And construction of a new home on the site of the old house owned by her parents is beginning next month. After firefighters had put out the blaze, the whole scene was frozen in ice. A frame was built around the remains of McDougall's home and a heater thawed the ice. What investigators found were the remains of a marijuana grow operation. The electrical meter had been bypassed to steal electricity in what Border told the court was an "extremely dangerous" manner. Electrical and hydroponics equipment were found at the scene. An engineer determined the fire could have been caused by the electrical deficiencies, the court heard. This is not the first time McDougall has been before the courts. Four years ago, he and a co-accused were charged with second-degree murder in the stabbing and bludgeoning death of another man. McDougall was acquitted as a judge ruled it was self-defence. Outside the courtroom, McDougall's lawyer said his client left the scene of the fire without calling 911 because he could hear the fire trucks on their way and he had a grow op in the home. "He did not want the fire to occur in his own residence and he honestly believed that the fire department was on its way and it was safe to leave," lawyer Adriano Iovinelli said outside court. "Obviously it wasn't, it was negligent, and we have these circumstances that exist now." McDougall had been renting the house since September. The new owner had revamped the place, as it had been the home of another grow op some years earlier. When initially questioned by police in the aftermath of the fire, McDougall said he was away from the home at the time on a two-day drinking binge. This was doubtful, as he left two dogs in the house and he was known as a diligent owner, the court was told. A tip to Crime Stoppers said Mc-Dougall had in fact arrived home just as the fire started. Witnesses described to investigators a horrifying scene, the court heard. Due to the terrible weather, fire trucks were stuck in the snow and hoses had to be hauled by hand to the fire. One firefighter who arrived on scene said the ashes were larger than his fist, the court heard. Some victims who lost their houses fled in the just their pyjamas. One looked out his home to see large pieces of burning material flying down the street. Another victim, the court was told, said the wind was so strong it sounded like a tornado. McDougall is back in court for his sentencing hearing on June 14. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake