A wildfire burns homes in Yarnell in June 2013. The fire killed 19 firefighters, and the question remains of why the firefighters left their safe zone.

PHOENIX — More than a year after 19 firefighters perished in the Yarnell Hill blaze, the crew’s lone survivor purportedly made a shocking revelation: Granite Mountain Hotshots were ordered to leave their safe zone during a radio call between their supervisor and his chief deputy.

Prescott City Attorney Jon Paladini says lookout Brendan McDonough, who barely escaped the firestorm, divulged his secret last fall in a conversation with Darrell Willis, former chief of wildland fires for the city.

When Willis reported the conversation to Paladini and others, it set off a chain reaction of legal actions beginning with reports to the Arizona State Forestry Division, the Prescott City Council and the Arizona Attorney General’s Office. It also led authorities to interview other potential witnesses, and prompted an unsuccessful effort to subpoena McDonough.

Asked to comment last week, McDonough told The Arizona Republic, “I think you’re being misinformed.”

Willis, when contacted by the newspaper, confirmed that McDonough approached him about seven months ago with new information on the tragedy that was not disclosed during two investigations. But he disputed key details in Paladini’s account.

If the events described by Paladini occurred, they help answer a lingering question about the tragedy.

They also could dramatically influence a wrongful-death lawsuit filed by some of the hotshots’ surviving family members, and workplace-safety litigation against the Arizona State Forestry Division for allegedly negligent supervision of wildfire-suppression efforts. An Arizona Division of Occupational Safety and Health investigation led the state Industrial Commission to issue $559,000 in fines, which are under appeal.

The Yarnell Hill Fire burned 8,000 acres, destroyed 114 structures and forced hundreds of residents to flee for their lives. The Granite Mountain crew’s decision to leave a safe area as winds whipped the blaze into a firestorm confounded wildfire experts and has remained a mystery despite two investigations.

Previously disclosed videos and testimony indicated that Eric Marsh — the crew’s supervisor who was separated from the others to scout the fire — and Jesse Steed — Marsh’s top deputy who was in charge of the crew — had a radio discussion on June 30, 2013, shortly before the hotshots were overcome by flames.

A thunderhead swirled over Yarnell, and the firestorm reversed direction. Marsh had descended from a ridge to the safety of a ranch compound in Glen Ilah. As flames raced in, McDonough executed a preplanned escape from his lookout post and joined several members of the Blue Ridge Hotshots.

Paladini offered the following account of McDonough’s story, as he says was related to him by Willis, who disagrees:

While moving vehicles with the Blue Ridge crew, McDonough allegedly overheard radio traffic between Marsh and Steed, who was with 17 crew members atop a ridge that had burned days earlier.

In the radio call, Marsh told Steed to leave the “black,” which was safe, and join him at the ranch. Steed protested, saying such a move would be dangerous. The radio exchange turned into a dispute.

“My understanding of the argument between Eric Marsh and Jesse Steed … was that Steed did not want to go down,” Paladini said.

According to Paladini’s account, Steed objected until Marsh gave him a direct order to descend.

Steed, a U.S. Marine veteran, consented to the command to relocate the team. But he told Marsh he thought it was a bad idea.

During one of the final radio transmissions, according to the account, Steed told Marsh the crew was not going to make it. “That is what Darrell (Willis) told me,” Paladini said.

At some point, as a wall of flames moved in, Marsh joined the hotshots and became trapped with them several hundred yards from the ranch house. Crew members tried to dig in and cover up with protective blankets, but all were killed.

McDonough declined to discuss the controversy in detail when contacted by The Republic, saying: “I’m just not doing anything within the media … involving around any of that kind of stuff.”

Amanda Marsh, the Granite Mountain supervisor’s widow, said Friday that if there was not a recording of the entire conversation, then it is just hearsay.

Marsh said McDonough has never talked to her about what he might have heard on the radio.

“There was so much happening, so much going on in those moments, so much adrenaline. … It’s very easy to Monday-morning quarterback all of these things that happened,” she said. “The bottom line is, they are never coming home. … Eric … made the best decisions with the information that he had at the time.”

McDonough had been interviewed extensively during two Yarnell Hill Fire investigations. Official reports contain no indication that he described a radio dispute between Granite Mountain’s leaders over the critical decision to relocate.

McDonough, who has obtained private legal counsel, so far has not been deposed in legal cases stemming from the accident.

Members of the Blue Ridge Hotshot crew, according to Paladini’s account, overheard the radio conversation with McDonough. The U.S. Forest Service refused to allow them to give sworn testimony for a workplace-safety probe by the Arizona Division of Occupational Safety and Health. The Blue Ridge firefighters were interviewed for a Serious Accident Investigation, conducted for the Forestry Division, but their statements were not recorded, and only summaries were released to the public.

Asked by phone last week to comment on McDonough’s purported revelations, Blue Ridge Superintendent Brian Frisby said, “We’re going to decline.”

Willis declined to verify Paladini’s version of the critical radio conversation and said he never quoted McDonough as saying that the crew was ordered off the ridge by Marsh. “That was not part of the detail that I knew — that he told me.”

However, he also said McDonough’s revelations were so shocking, “I told him at that point it couldn’t just sit with me. I had to go further.”

Willis told The Republic he has a close relationship with McDonough and has been a sounding board since the Yarnell Hill tragedy. He said McDonough called him late last year and “wanted to get something off his shoulders. He did.”

Willis said he did not want to violate a confidence and gave McDonough a weekend to publicly reveal the information. When that failed, Willis said, he contacted Paladini and then-state Forester Scott Hunt.

Attorney General’s Office investigators sought to corroborate the account by interviewing others with whom McDonough may have shared confidences, including Sharon Knutson-Felix, executive director of the 100 Club of Arizona, which raises money for the families of first responders killed on the job.

Knutson-Felix said McDonough came to her last year because he was upset, but she advised investigators there was no discussion of radio transmissions and she could not recall specifics.

Paladini divulged his knowledge of the controversy after being contacted by The Republic. “At some point, the whole truth — the whole story — has to come out,” he said. “From the beginning, there has always been the question of why they left the black. … The question on why may go on unanswered forever.”


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Republic reporter Richard Ruelas contributed to this article.