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Rabu, 03 Juli 2013

Brendan McDonough was acting as a lookout from a hillside as rest of crew fought wildfire.

PRESCOTT, Ariz. — From his lookout position on a scrubby hillside,

Brendan McDonough tracked the fast-changing elements of the Yarnell

Hill Fire late Sunday: the weather, the landscape, the movement of the

flames and smoke. Finally, officials would later say, he made a

decision.



Weather conditions were changing. The wind was pushing the fire in

another direction. McDonough had reached a preset trigger based on

those conditions, and he needed to move. He radioed the news to his

crew, the 19 other members of the Granite Mountain Hotshots who were

fighting the fire farther down the hill.



STORY: Investigation of fatal Arizona fire getting underway



PHOTOS: The Yarnell Hill Fire: Faces of the fallen firefighters



As he hiked out of the area, he spoke by radio to another crew,

according to a Prescott Fire Department spokesman who recounted the

events.



When he turned back, he realized the fire had engulfed the lookout

point he'd just left. He never heard back from his crew mates, who

died when the shifting flames swept across their fire line.



The identity of McDonough, the much-discussed 20th member of the

hotshot crew, emerged Tuesday through social media, reporters'

inquiries and, finally, an official announcement.



Then just as quickly, the 21-year-old firefighter pleaded for privacy,

a message relayed by authorities who asked the media and the public to

give McDonough time to deal with what happened.



"He is very distraught, as you might think," said Wade Ward, a Fire

Department spokesman. "He is very emotional. He's got all the

questions, the why and the why not. He's concerned for the families

mostly. I can tell you Brendan has no desire to speak to anybody at

this point."

At a community meeting Tuesday, Ward acknowledged the intense interest

in McDonough, whose existence was revealed in some of the earliest

reports about the deaths of the firefighters.



There were questions about his role in the crew and why he wasn't with

the other members when fire struck.



On Tuesday, officials explained his duties and said that they wanted

people to understand that McDonough followed procedures and prepared

to move to a new location in advance of his crew, as his assignment

required.



"He did his job," Ward said.

McDonough appeared briefly Tuesday night at an emotional vigil in

Prescott, surrounded by firefighters as the crowd cheered. But he has

given no interviews and, on his Facebook page, he asked friends and

family not to speak with the news media if they were approached.



But a sketchy portrait of McDonough came together through social

media, public records and statements by fire department officials.



On his Facebook page, McDonough said he had lived previously in

Oceanside, Calif., a beach city between San Diego and Orange County.



As a teenager, he moved to Prescott and attended Prescott High School,

where he was involved with the Air Force Junior ROTC. He graduated in

2009 and later enrolled at Yavapai College, where he studied fire

science.



He joined the Granite Mountain Hotshots in 2011, "my dream job," he

wrote in an April 2011 Facebook post, "full of excitement and an

adrenaline rush I can't explain. (I) work with the best people I

could."



Just weeks earlier, he had become a father. In March 2011, the

Prescott Daily Courier published a baby announcement that said

McDonough and Natalie Nesvig, also of Prescott, had welcomed a baby

girl, Michaela Rose McDonough. Nesvig had posted photos of herself and

McDonough together in various settings, including in two of her online

profile pictures.

McDonough was in his third season with the hotshots when the Yarnell

Hill Fire erupted last week. On Sunday afternoon, he was working as a

lookout.



Fire experts say the lookout is critical for firefighters, who need a

set of eyes focused on the weather and the movement of the flames.



Ward said McDonough's job Sunday was to watch the situation and decide

when the various elements reached the "trigger points" that would

signal a change in position.



When McDonough determined he needed to move, he radioed the supervisor

of his hotshot crew. Officials said he radioed that the weather was

changing and that the fire was shifting in a new direction. He told

his crew members that if they needed anything to contact him. Then, he

left with the superintendent of another hotshot crew.



Bob Orrill, a member of the Southwest Incident Command team, met with

McDonough early Tuesday and brought a message to the community

meeting.



"Brendan would like to express his appreciation and that of his fallen

brothers for the outpouring of support towards this organization and

the firefighting community in general," Orrill said.



An emotional crowd at the community meeting applauded and cheered as

Ward and Orrill relayed McDonough's story.



Some of the loudest cheers came as Ward asked the news media to

respect McDonough's privacy.



On social-media sites, McDonough's family and friends offered support.

His father, Scott McDonough, who is in Boston, posted a picture of his

son in firefighting gear and said: "Good work in Arizona, son. Proud

and glad you're safe!"



In Prescott, Juliann Ashcraft, wife of Andrew Ashcraft, one of the

fallen firefighters, talked about McDonough on Tuesday.



"I hope that he knows we love him," she said.



Contributing: Arizona Republic reporters Ken Alltucker, Saba Hamedy,

Scott Craven, Rebekah L. Sanders, and KPNX-TV reporter Lissette

Martinez.

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