Community Corner

Sag Harbor Fire 'Not Arson': Demolition of Next Building Slated: Police Chief

BREAKING: Two men were living above the Compass real estate building and left with nothing after the fire.

SAG HARBOR, NY — The fire that ravaged Sag Harbor's Main Street Friday was deemed not to be arson, according to Sag Harbor Village Police Chief AJ McGuire.

"It was absolutely, 100 percent not arson," McGuire said Monday,

Sag Harbor police are waiting for a final report from the East Hampton Town fire marshal and Suffolk County Police arson squad, with the exact cause to be determined.

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McGuire said officials were on Main Street Monday to demolish the Compass real estate building, badly damaged in the fire.

Reflecting on Friday's massive blaze, McGuire praised the Sag Harbor Fire Department and all the departments who rushed to the scene from Eastport to Montauk, as well as Flanders and Riverhead, to help. Numerous EMS crews also turned out en masse to offer assistance, he said.

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"It was a very difficult scene to manage because it was so dynamic. Conditions deteriorated quickly, and then the twist, with it being 15 degrees with ice everywhere," McGuire said.

Firefighters stood under hoses pouring water that "turned to ice immediately," he said.

"The firefighters did a tremendous job, getting it to stop where it stopped. This really could have been horrific," McGuire said.

Had the fire started even an hour earlier, and not been reported by Sag Harbor Village Police Officer Randy Steyert, McGuire said, "We might have had a fatality."

Steyert, he said, knocked on the door of a tenant, Michael Lynch, living in an apartment above the Compass real estate building, to the right of the Sag Harbor cinema.

Lynch shared the story of his harrowing escape with Patch.

Lynch's roommate Fred Kumwenda was not home, but also lost everything in the blaze.

The lobby of the Sag Harbor Cinema was demolished Saturday; but the sign and the building behind the lobby, which housed the seats and screen, was saved.

Despite "horrible" conditions, McGuire said the response from firefighters across the East End was amazing and a testament to the dedication of the many volunteers who risk their lives to save others.

Patch courtesy photo.

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