Pubdate: Thu, 17 Oct 2002
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2002 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248

FIRE KILLS 6; MOTHER HAD ANGERED DRUG DEALERS

BALTIMORE -- A woman who neighbors said tried to force drug dealers off her 
street corner was killed, along with five of her children, when fire tore 
through their home Wednesday.

It was the second fire to strike the corner row house in two weeks, 
investigators said.

The only survivor of Wednesday's fire was the woman's husband, who was 
critically injured. He suffered third-degree burns and jumped from a 
second-floor window, fire officials said.

Investigators had not determined late Wednesday what caused the 2:30 a.m. fire.

In the first fire, a "cocktail bomb" was thrown through the kitchen window 
as the family slept, about the same time as Wednesday's fire, neighbors 
said. The woman's husband woke in time to put out the flames.

Neighbor Gerlena Jackson said the woman killed, whom she identified as 
Angela Dawson, had argued for weeks with a group of teenage boys who hung 
out on the corner dealing drugs.

"They had words, they had confrontations. She was threatened," Jackson 
said. "She was a concerned mother, just like us all."

The family boarded the window after the first fire, but Dawson didn't stop 
sparring with the teens, Jackson said.

The victims were found on the second and third floors and appeared to have 
died of smoke inhalation and burns, fire department spokesman Kevin 
Cartwright said.

Officials did not immediately release their names. Neighbors and principals 
at the children's schools identified those killed as Carnell Dawson and 
Juan Ortiz, both fifth-graders; twins Kevin and Keith Dawson, both 
third-graders; and LaWanda Ortiz, a seventh-grader.

Dawson's husband, Carnell Dawson Sr., was hospitalized in critical condition.

Neighbor Geraldine Lee, 59, said she saw flames coming out of the windows 
of the brick row house about 3 a.m.

"I don't even see how the firemen could have gotten in that house," Lee said.

The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms also is investigating 
the fire's cause, Cartwright said.
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