Oregon Insurers Sue Landowners in Ashland Fire

By | December 3, 2012

Insurance companies that paid $1.7 million to six homeowners in a fire blamed on a homeless Ashland, Ore. man have sued the owners of a vacant lot where the fire started.

The suit alleges the owners had been told vagrants were camping in the overgrown field behind a gasoline station, starting fires and smoking cigarettes.

A lawyer for the owners denies the allegations.

In all, 11 homes were destroyed in the fire in late August 2010. It has been called the worst fire in a century in the southern Oregon town.

A judge found that the man accused of reckless burning, 42-year-old John Thiry, likely set the fire, but prosecutors failed to prove he knew the consequences of his actions.

Thiry remains homeless in Ashland.

Topics Lawsuits Carriers Oregon

Was this article valuable?

Here are more articles you may enjoy.

From This Issue

Insurance Journal Magazine December 3, 2012
December 3, 2012
Insurance Journal Magazine

Program Directory Vol. II