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USFS in legal fight over coverup of employee who may have used pot


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By Denny Walsh, Sacramento Bee

The Moonlight Fire was the U.S. Forest Service’s worst nightmare.

For two weeks in September 2007 it raged like a fire-breathing dragon across 65,000 acres in Plumas and Lassen counties, devouring everything in its path, including 46,000 acres of lush national forest.

But there is an additional troubling dimension to this catastrophe, one that, like the fire itself, still haunts the Forest Service. From the start, there was a recognition of potential legal complications if it became known that a Forest Service patrol officer claimed another agency employee may have been smoking marijuana while he manned the lookout tower closest to the site where the fire started.

That fear has now been realized. A timber company being sued for causing the fire has filed documents in court that reveal the government tried to cover up the claim, causing dissension within the Forest Service.

Long before the devastating wildfire was contained, federal and state investigators were satisfied that a bulldozer belonging to a company harvesting timber for Sierra Pacific Industries hit a rock and a spark flew into dry duff on private property.

Sierra Pacific and the logger, Howell’s Forest Harvesting, strongly dispute that.

The final report on the fire, publicly released on June 30, 2009, included no mention of suspected marijuana use by the Red Rock lookout the day the fire started.

In court papers, Sierra Pacific lawyers describe the report as “completely sanitized.”

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  1. Bob says - Posted: March 26, 2012

    I wish the forest service employees noted below would come forward with what really happened at the Angora fire. According to 3 witnesses a group of firemen driving green trucks were doyling around a few small fires when a wisp of wind came along and the boys were told to run for their lives. One boy was even injured according to a later written publication. I’ve repeated the story to the assigned Angora investigator down in Placerville the story but never heard more from him. Who knows if he did anything with my information. He had never thought to interview anyone from Mountain View Estates before I called him a year or two ago. He’d never heard of that story before. Some investigator, huh? Seems he was too busy with the forest service story at Seneca Pond. Where did you run into those firemen with the green trucks boys? Was it near Seneca Pond as mentioned by the forest service, or was it elsewhere? Hopefully someone comes forward with the complete story one day. Me and alot of families would really like to know. So would the insurance companies too I imagine.