55°F
weather icon Cloudy

Man charged with arson in multimillion-dollar LA apartment fire

LOS ANGELES — A 56-year-old man was charged on Thursday with setting a massive fire that destroyed much of a multimillion-dollar apartment complex under construction in downtown Los Angeles and damaged three nearby buildings.

Dawud Abdulwali, who was taken into custody this week in connection with the Dec. 8 fire, pleaded innocent to two counts of arson during a brief hearing in Los Angeles Superior Court.

Abdulwali, who was handcuffed during the hearing and clad in gray shorts and a black T-shirt, was ordered held on $1 million bail after prosecutors told Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Sergio Tapia that the defendant had a long criminal history that included convictions for fraud, grand theft and battery.

“He’s a flight risk and a danger to the community. This isn’t your normal arson, it’s not even your normal aggravated arson. There are damages near $100 million,” Los Angeles County Deputy District Attorney Sean Carney told the judge.

A public defender appointed to represent Abdulwali had asked that bail be set at $500,000.

Abdulwali was ordered back to court on June 11 for a preliminary hearing, when prosecutors were expected to lay out at least some of their evidence in the high-profile case.

So far authorities have said little about what they believe motivated Abdulwali to set the fire, which took about 250 firefighters to extinguish and caused an estimated $30 million in damage to the building alone.

In announcing his arrest on Tuesday, police declined to say what evidence linked Abdulwali to the blaze.

An accelerant was used to start the fire on the fourth floor of the seven-story Da Vinci complex apartment complex under construction in downtown Los Angeles, according to the District Attorney’s Office.

The building was to become the latest of several Italian-style luxury apartment complexes erected by developer G.H. Palmer Associates in the downtown area.

The site that burned, two stories of poured concrete beneath five floors of wood framing, occupied an entire city block near the junction of two major traffic arteries - the Hollywood Freeway and the Harbor Freeway.

No one was injured, but much of the structure, wrapped in scaffolding, collapsed in the flames, producing heat so intense it ignited three floors of a neighboring high-rise building. The radiant heat also blew out windows in two other office buildings.

If convicted, Abdulwali faces a maximum sentence of 10 years to life in prison.

(Additional reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Writing by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Cynthia Johnston, Lisa Lambert and Mohammad Zargham)

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
Disneyland may soon move to dynamic pricing, Disney CFO says

A new airline-style demand pricing model recently adopted by Disneyland Paris that rewards visitors who book early and punishes those who wait too long to buy tickets may soon be coming to Disneyland and Disney California Adventure.

Trump accuses Democrats of sedition ‘punishable by death’

Donald Trump on Thursday accused half a dozen Democratic lawmakers of sedition “punishable by DEATH” after the lawmakers — all veterans of the armed services and intelligence community — called on U.S. military members to uphold the Constitution and defy “illegal orders.”

Jeffrey Epstein case files bill signed by Trump

President Donald Trump signed legislation to release files on convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, bowing to political pressure from his own party after initially resisting those efforts.

Cloudflare outage impacts thousands, disrupts ChatGPT, X and more

A widely used Internet infrastructure company said that it has largely resolved an issue that led to outages impacting users of everything from ChatGPT and the online game, “League of Legends,” to the New Jersey Transit system early Tuesday.

MORE STORIES