-
Hotel Guest Takes Photo at 3am, Internet Outraged by What They Find - 14 mins ago
-
King Charles III made to wait for $60 million pay raise as Britons grapple with cost of living - 19 mins ago
-
Germany’s Kärcher Expands with New Service Center - 25 mins ago
-
Trump administration shuts down U.S. website on climate change - 31 mins ago
-
NBA Free Agency Signings Tracker: Rockets Poach Dorian Finney-Smith From Lakers - 43 mins ago
-
Cat Follows Kids to School—What the Principal Does Next Is Perfect - 54 mins ago
-
Police in Turkey detain satirical magazine employees over Prophet Muhammad cartoon controversy - about 1 hour ago
-
Inside the L.A. Zoo’s messy $50-million breakup - about 1 hour ago
-
Yankees without pitcher Fernando Cruz due to strained oblique - about 1 hour ago
-
Two Towns Represent Hungary in Prestigious Flower Competition - 2 hours ago
Eaton fire’s 18th victim has been identified; He was an actor and a teacher
Kevin Devine was last seen outside of his Boston Street apartment complex in Altadena on Jan. 7, hours after the deadly Eaton fire ignited. Weeks passed without word of his fate.
The county medical examiner’s office has confirmed that Devine, 54, died in that fire. His remains were discovered April 2 in the 900 block of Boston Street, one block east of Lake Avenue.
He is the 18th person known to have died in the Eaton fire, and the only victim to perish east of Lake Avenue. Devine was identified in the Medical Examiner’s website on April 22.
An actor and substitute teacher, Devine spoke on the evening of Jan. 7 to his worried mother in Michigan, who called after seeing reports of fires in Los Angeles.
“I said, ‘Kevin, you have to leave,’ ” Margaret Devine told The Times in January. “He said, ‘I’m OK, Mom.’ ”
Devine’s landlord saw him in his car outside the apartment complex around 9 p.m., roughly three hours after the fire broke out on a hillside above Eaton Canyon Wash. It was his last reported sighting.
As emergency crews combed the charred streets of Altadena in the following days, Devine was nowhere to be found. There was no sign of his car. His family called hospitals and evacuation shelters. They began speaking of him in the past tense.
On April 2, a special operations team from the medical examiner’s office responded to a report of possible human remains found on the block where he was last seen. The office has since confirmed that they belonged to Devine, who died of burns and smoke inhalation.
Thirty people are known to have died in the Palisades and Eaton fires, which together destroyed more than 16,000 homes in Los Angeles County in early January. All have been publicly identified but one, a person whose remains were found on Las Lomas Avenue in Pacific Palisades.
Reporter Noah Goldberg contributed to this report.
Source link