Crime & Safety

Deadly 1,000-Acre Calimesa Fire: Arraignment Set For Accused

Antonio Ornelas Velazquez, 38, of Desert Hot Springs is scheduled to appear in court Tuesday.

A firefighter battles the deadly inferno inside the Villa Calimesa Mobile Home Park in October 2019.
A firefighter battles the deadly inferno inside the Villa Calimesa Mobile Home Park in October 2019. (Renee Schiavone/Patch)

BANNING, CA — A dump truck driver accused of causing a deadly 1,000- acre blaze in Calimesa by intentionally dropping flaming debris from his vehicle in a windstorm is slated to be arraigned next week.

Antonio Ornelas Velazquez, 38, of Desert Hot Springs was charged earlier this year with two counts of involuntary manslaughter and one count of burning an inhabited structure for the Oct. 10, 2019, blaze.

The defendant, who is free on bond, is scheduled to appear before Riverside County Superior Court Judge Timothy Hollenhorst on Tuesday at the Banning Justice Center.

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Velazquez was arrested in February following a 14-month-long investigation by Cal Fire peace officers and Riverside County sheriff's detectives.

"The Sandalwood Fire was caused by a burning load of trash that was dumped next to dry vegetation by the trash truck that Velazquez was operating," according to a Cal Fire statement released at the time.

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Prosecutors allege that about 2 p.m. on Oct. 10, the defendant noticed smoke rising from the scoop of the CR&R truck he was operating on Sandalwood Drive, near Seventh Street. Against the advice of a motorist and another truck driver who pulled up behind him and warned of the dangers of allowing burning material into the open amid high winds, Velazquez "dumped the burning load onto the ground" directly adjacent to brush along the roadway, according to the District Attorney's Office.

Santa Ana winds gusting to 40 mph quickly pushed the flames into the Villa Calimesa Mobile Home Park.

Hannah Labelle, 61, and Lois Arvikson, 89, were killed as the flames swept over their properties, leaving them no time to escape.

Seventy-two structures were completely destroyed, and another 16 damaged, according to investigators.

The blaze charred a total 1,011 acres before it was stopped just inside San Bernardino County four days later.

Lawsuits were filed against CR&R weeks later and are pending.

Velazquez has no documented prior felony convictions in Riverside County.