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Companies that sold gender-reveal fireworks which ignited California wildfire agree to $4m settlement

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Companies that sold gender-reveal fireworks which ignited California wildfire agree to $4m settlement
El Dorado blaze that burned 22,744 acres and claimed the life of a firefighter was ignited by an illegal device Sign up for the Breaking News US newsletter email Nearly six years after a couple’s gender-reveal stunt sparked a deadly wildfire in southern California, the companies that sold the pyrotechnic device have agreed to a multimillion-dollar settlement. The Hubbard, Ohio-based Wholesale Fireworks Corp and its subsidiary American Fireworks Wholesale LLC have agreed to pay more than $4m, the US attorney’s office in the central district of California announced on Tuesday. A third company, the Miami-based Pink or Blue Gender Team Inc, agreed to pay $50,000. Continue reading...

El Dorado blaze that burned 22,744 acres and claimed the life of a firefighter was ignited by an illegal deviceSign up for the Breaking News US newsletter emailNearly six years after a couple’s gender-reveal stunt sparked a deadly wildfire in southern California, the companies that sold the pyrotechnic device have agreed to a multimillion-dollar settlement.The Hubbard, Ohio-based Wholesale Fireworks Corp and its subsidiary American Fireworks Wholesale LLC have agreed to pay more than $4m, the US attorney’s office in the central district of California announced on Tuesday. A third company, the Miami-based Pink or Blue Gender Team Inc, agreed to pay $50,000.The payments resolve civil claims brought on behalf of the US Forest Service in the wake of the so-called El Dorado fire, which incinerated 22,744 acres (9,204 hectares) and wiped out nine structures and more than a dozen outbuildings. Forest Service estimates of the damage totaled more than $41m.Veteran Forest Service firefighter Charles Morton, 39, died 12 days into the blaze while fighting the fire that had spread to the San Bernardino national forest.The settlement caps a legal saga that included a criminal case against the couple who inadvertently started the fire on 5 September 2020 in El Dorado Ranch park when they launched gender-reveal smoke bombs for a photo shoot that quickly ignited the dry grass.Federal prosecutors said the devices should never have been sold in California, where they are illegal, and faulted the companies for not including adequate warnings that the smoke bombs could start a fire. The companies, prosecutors argued, were liable due to their role in designing, importing, distributing, marketing and advertising the smoke bombs, which allegedly also had an unsafe design.Representatives from the three companies did not respond to requests for comment on Wednesday.In 2024, Refugio Jimenez Jr and Angela Renee Jimenez pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter and other charges for their role in starting the fire. Refugio Jimenez was sentenced to a year in jail and two years’ probation, while Angela Jimenez was sentenced to a year of probation, according to the San Bernardino county district attorney’s office. The couple was also ordered to pay nearly $1.8m in restitution.Gender-reveal parties surged in popularity throughout the 2010s only to grow more extreme as cake cuttings and balloon drops were eclipsed by dramatic stunts involving rifles, airplanes and alligators. Gender-reveals gone wrong have sometimes ended with devastating consequences, including injuries, wide-scale property damage and death.A border agent sparked the Arizona Sawmill fire in 2017 when he shot an explosive target for a gender-reveal party in the Santa Rita mountain foothills. In 2019, a 56-year-old woman in Iowa died after she was hit by debris from an inadvertently made pipe bomb used for a gender-reveal party. That same year in Texas, a small plane crashed after dumping hundreds of gallons of pink water for a gender reveal; the pilot and passenger survived.Among those who now warn against over-the-top gender reveals is the woman credited with launching the trend in 2008. “Who cares what gender the baby is?” Jenna Karvunidis wrote in a 2019 Facebook post, explaining how her attitude toward the practice had changed.

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