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Man arrested over deadly Palisades Fire in California

12 people died in the Palisades Fire and thousands of acres of land were destroyed
12 people died in the Palisades Fire and thousands of acres of land were destroyed

A man has been arrested on charges that he intentionally started the devastating Pacific Palisades Fire in Los Angeles that killed 12 people and destroyed neighbourhoods earlier this year, the US Justice Department has said.

Jonathan Rinderknecht is facing federal criminal charges related to the fire after an investigation by the Los Angeles field division of the US Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF); the Los Angeles Fire Department; and the Los Angeles Police Department.

He was arrested in Florida yesterday and will be transferred back to the Central District of California to stand trial, Bill Essayli, the acting US attorney in Los Angeles, told reporters.

Mr Rinderknecht started the fire after finishing his shift as an Uber driver, Mr Essayli alleged.

Jonathan Rinderknecht is pictured following his arrest in connection with the Palisades Fire in Los Angeles
Jonathan Rinderknecht was taken into custody on suspicion of destruction of property by means of fire (Pic: US Department of Justice)

Videos of the fire taken on his cellphone and 911 calls were among the evidence connecting Mr Rinderknecht to the fire, Mr Essayli said.

The fire in the Palisades started in early January and scorched more than 9,308 hectares (23,000 acres).

It was the most destructive fire in the city's history, destroying some 6,000 structures around Los Angeles, causing about $150 billion in damages.

Investigators determined that the fire started near a popular hiking trail on the hillside of a state park overlooking the Pacific Palisades overnight in early January.

It ravaged large parts of the Pacific Palisades, Topanga and Malibu before firefighters were finally able to contain the blaze about 24 days later.

Mr Essayli said Mr Rinderknecht, who lived in Pacific Palisades at the time, was working as an Uber driver in the area and had dropped passengers off moments before he ignited the blaze.

At a press conference, investigators showed AI-generated images that they allege the suspect had created in the weeks before the blaze, showing a cityscape on fire.

Mr Rinderknecht was also alleged to have repeatedly watched the video for a French rap track that included images of fire.

Firefighters struggled for days to contain the fires, hampered by 160km-an-hour winds that prevented them from using helicopters and planes.

The scale of the blazes created difficulties, as did an urban water supply that was never designed to cope with such enormous conflagrations.

The arrest came after an intense investigation, with speculation that errant fireworks may have sparked the Palisades Fire.