Fire Protection and Arson Investigation
Fire Protection and Arson Investigation
Fire Protection and Arson Investigation
ARSON INVESTIGATION
THEORIES OF
COMBUSTION
• FIRE TRIANGLE THEORY
• FIRE TETRAHEDRON
THEORY
• LIFE CYCLE OF FIRE
THEORY
FIRE
TRIANGLE
THEORY
ELEMENTS OF
FIRE TRIANGLE
HEAT
OXYGEN
FUEL
OXYGEN ( OXIDIZING AGENT)
Chemical energy
Electrical energy
Nuclear energy
Mechanical energy
Heat
Light
NATURE OF
FIRE
PYROLYSIS
• Endothermic reaction
• Exothermic reaction
• Oxidation
• Combustion/flame
Phases of Burning/ The
Three stages of Fire
• Incipient/
beginning phase
• Free-burning
phase
• Smoldering
phase
• Any action taken during fire fighting
Backdraft operations that allows air to mix with these
hot gases can result in an explosive ignition
• Occurs when a room or
other area is heated enough
that flames sweep over the
entire surface
• The point in a fire at which
other combustibles within
the area ignite, changing
the fire from one object on
fire to many objects on fire
• Occurs with the initial
ignition of the fire in the
Flashover original object, but on a
much larger scale
Rollover
• Class A
• Class B
• Class C
• Class D
• Class K
Classification of Fire
Extinguishers
•Class A
•Class B
•Class C
•Class D
Spontaneous Heating- • Spontaneous heating
the condition that and spontaneous
builds up temperature ignition start as a
high enough to cause result of a chemical
ignition reaction within the
material- a reaction
independent of any
outside source of heat
Propagation of
Fire
Simply means the spread of
fire
• Conduction – the transmission of
heat through an object/ medium or
conductor such as pipe metal hot
air, wire, or even wall
• Radiation- the transmission through
Types of Heat
Transmission the discharge and spread of heat
from a heated or burning source
• Convection- the transmission of
heat by the moving currents of
liquid or gas
Intensity of Fire
Chemical contents
Information
indicated on Type of extinguisher
• Classification of
fire
• Best
extinguishing
agent
State of Matter
• Class 1 Explosives
• Class 2 Gases: Compressed, liquified, or
dissolved under pressure
• Class 3 Flammable Liquids
• Class 4 Flammable Solids
• Class 5 Oxidizing Substances and Organic
Peroxides
• Class 6 Poisonous (toxic) Infectious Substances
• Class 7 Radioactive Substance
• Class 8 Corrosives
• Class 9 Miscellaneous Dangerous Substances
PRINCIPLES OF
STRUCTURAL FIRE
FIGHTING
STRUCTURAL FIRE FIGHTING
Temperature
Weather
Humidity
Types of ventilation
• Vertical ventilation –The method to establish vertical ventilation is It must be worked
from the top turned down.
• Cross/ horizontal ventilation – if the smoke and gases have not reached the higher
levels, cross ventilation can clear the building one floor at a time . Windows are the
easiest and generally most available for the common types of buildings but the
indiscriminate Opening Of windows and doors can defeat the purpose of ventilation
• mechanical or forced ventilation – a process or method of ventilation where by a
device such as smoke ejector is utilized to remove faster excessive heat and dense
smoke in a confined building.
Factors to determine the location for the
opening ventilation
• a spreader is a hydraulic tool designed with two arms which have a narrow tip
Ladder terminology
• Bed ladder –the lowest section of an extension ladder
• Fly ladder – the top section of an extension ladder
• Butt – the bottom end of ladder
• Heel - the part of the ladder that touches the ground
• Halyard – a rope or cable used to raise the fly ladder
• Pawl or dog – the mechanism located at the end of the fly ladder that locks do the bed ladder
• Rung- the cross member of a ladder that is used for climbing
• top or tip – it is the top part of a ladder
• Hooks – part of a ladder that is used to look over a roof peak, sills, or walls where the heel
does not rest on a foundation ( found only roof type ladders )
• Stops – made of metal or would blocks used to prevent the fly of an extension ladder from
extending out further from the ladder
• Guides – light metal strips of an extension ladder that guides the fly ladder while it is being
raised or lowered
Type of ladder carries
The amount of
the type and
salvage the personnel the method of
amount of
equipment available storage
material involved
available
Overhaul
innocent fire
incendiary fire
unknown fire
PERSONS RESPONSIBLE TO
EXAMINE AND INSPECT THE FIRE
SCENE
Fire Marshall
Fire Chief
Assistant Chief For Technical Service
Fire Inspector Responsible For The Specific
Building
Senior Fire Officer At The Fire Scene
Photographer
Utilities Personnel Particularly Electrician
FIRE INVESTIGATION
AND EVIDENCE KIT
Search Systematically
Observe
Take Photograph
Work By The Process Of Elimination
Check And Verify
Take Note
Draw Diagrams
AREAS TO CONDUCT
FIRE INVESTIGATION
• Exterior
• Interior
• Debris
• furnishings
FIRE REPORT AMERICAN
SETTING
• time of incident
• location of incident
• size and nature of fire
• fire involvement
• Fire department plant response
• injuries and fatalities
• time fire extinguished
• most probable cause
• follow up and corrective action required
TYPES OF FIRE ARSON
INVESTIGATION
• Basic investigation
• Purposes
• To determine what property was damaged
• What the causes and reasons where
• The number and extent of injuries or
fatalities
• The recommended corrective actions to
prevent recurrence
TECHNICAL
INVESTIGATION
• it is an in-depth
investigation to determine
more specific details of
the cause and effects and
to establish necessary
corrective action
REASONS IN CONDUCTING
TECHNICAL INVESTIGATION
• The use of
photographs to
document much of
the evidence
Arson
• is a crime against persons or property
• The willfull and malicious burning of
another’s property With intent to injure
LAWS ON or defraud the insurer of that property
Arson
not be destroyed, scorching is sufficient)
• that the property is of another, or in the case
of one's own property the intent was to
injure or defraud the insurer
• that any person who caused the fire to be
set, is Aided, counseled or procured the
burning is equally responsible as the actual
fire setter
WHAT CONSTITUTES ARSON
• Burning – there must be burning or changing , example the fiber of the
wood must be destroyed or decomposed its identity or physical state
changed
• Willfulness – the act was done purposely and with intention
• Motive – the moving cause that induces the Commission of the crime
• Malice – it denotes hatred or a desire for revenge
• Intent – the purpose or design with which the act is done and involves
the will to do the act
• concealment of other crimes
• defrauding the insurance company
The most
common
motives of
arson
• it is the fact of that crime was
committed
Motive
MOST COMMON MOTIVES OF ARSON
• Economic gain defrauding the insurance company
• 1. insurance fraud – benefits
• 2. desire to dispose merchandise – loss of market value being out of
season, lack of raw materials, oversupply of merchandise