Rockland County

2 More Workers Indicted in Deadly Rockland Adult Home Fire

One resident and one firefighter died in the March blaze that destroyed the Evergreen Court home in Spring Valley

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What to Know

  • A raging blaze destroyed a Rockland County adult home in March, killing one resident and one firefighter
  • The fire was intense enough to cause parts of the Evergreen Court building to collapse
  • Investigators said in the days afterwards that it appeared the automated alarm system was offline at the time of the fire

Another indictment has been handed down in Rockland County as part of the district attorney's ongoing investigation into the deadly fire at an adult care home that claimed the lives of a resident and a responding firefighter.

Raymond Canario and Wayne Ballard, two Village of Spring Valley building department employees, have been indicted on multiple counts of presenting false instruments for filing and falsifying records.

Canario, who works as a Spring Valley assistant building inspector, is also a volunteer fire fighter. He responded that March night to help fight the fire.

"I live a nightmare every single day. I don't eat, I don't sleep," he said late last month when speaking exclusively to the I-Team. He's been charged with falsifying inspection reports filed with the state in 2019.

Canario maintains his innocence and says he's done nothing wrong. Attorney information for Ballard was not immediately known.

Monday's indictment is the second in recent weeks to come down from a Rockland County grand jury. Last month, a grand jury indicted a father and son on multiple charges including second-degree manslaughter.

Nathaniel and Aaron Sommer, a Rabbi and his son, have denied any wrongdoing in the fire that killed a volunteer firefighter and elderly resident of the Evergreen Court Home for Adults. The facility maintains that the two were independent contractors.

The father-and-son duo had been performing a pre-Passover cleaning ritual that involves heating kitchen utensils to burn off traces of forbidden food. Records show that the Evergreen Court fire was reported about 90 minutes after Nathaniel and Aaron Sommer had left the facility after preparing the kitchen for Passover, the Journal News previously reported.

Evergreen officials said after the fire that Nathaniel Sommer had been performing the cleaning ritual at the facility for 15 years. They're accused of using a blowtorch that could be in violation of state safety regulations.

Community advocates are now calling for a new crackdown on lax code enforcement in the wake of a raid on the Spring Valley Village Hall on Wednesday, that came amid an investigation into a fatal fire at an adult home. NBC New York's Sarah Wallace reports.

The Sommers were among six people charged in June in connection with the fire. Two Spring Valley employees, Canario and Ballard, were charged with presenting false instruments for filing and falsifying records. In addition, two others face charges, including a reckless endangerment charge for the home's director.

Investigators had said two days after the blaze destroyed the facility that its automated alarm system was offline at the time of the fire.

Multiple sources with firsthand knowledge of the investigation tell News 4 that the automated alarm system was not connected to the county's central dispatch when the fire broke out, meaning someone in the facility had to call 911 and report the fire manually. In fact, the system had been taken offline the evening before the deadly blaze, sources told NBC New York.

County, state and federal investigators conducted a raid on the Spring Valley Village Hall just last week in connection with the probe.

A source familiar with the investigation told News 4 at the time that village documents connected to the fatal fire in March were suspected to be potentially fraudulent. The scope of the investigation has now expanded to include the entire village, the source added.

The Rockland County District Attorney's Office led the raid along with New York state fire inspectors and agents from the federal Department of Homeland Security.

Nearly 24 hours after a firefighter went missing in a suburban New York assisted living home fire, his body has been found. Rockland County volunteer firefighter Jared Lloyd was the second casualty in the blaze that gutted the Evergreen Court Home for Adults in Spring Valley early Tuesday, according to Rabbi Yisroel Kahan of the county's Human Rights Commission. Lloyd was escorted to the Medical Examiner early Wednesday morning, Kahan said. Officials say Lloyd was one of the first firefighters to arrive at the scene. He was on the third floor trying to put out the flames when he became disoriented and eventually trapped there. His body was found just before midnight Wednesday after a search crew with a rescue dog were unable to locate him Tuesday afternoon. Marc Santia reports.

Rockland County volunteer firefighter Jared Lloyd was one of two casualties in the blaze that gutted the Spring Valley nursing home. A resident died as well.

Officials say Lloyd was one of the first firefighters to arrive at the scene. He was on the third floor trying to put out the flames when he became disoriented and eventually trapped there. Lloyd was last heard from when he issued a mayday call, and did not make it out of the building as it collapsed.

According to Rockland County officials, smoke detector and sprinkler reports, which are not directly overseen by the Health Department but which were reviewed, were found in compliance by RCDOH when checked last in December 2019.

Nearly 24 hours after a firefighter went missing in a suburban New York assisted living home fire, his body has been found. NBC New York's Tracie Strahan reports.

Denise Kerr, director of the Evergreen Court Home for Adults, has called the fire "an unspeakable tragedy," adding that home officials are cooperating with all state and local authorities as the investigation into the blaze continues, and they have launched their own internal investigation as well.

Kerr said in a later statement the center was inspected multiple times by the Department of Health and local authorities in 2020, and no citations or violations related to fire safety were found.

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