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Published: Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Investigators now almost certain fatal fire wasn't arson

  • From left Miguel Angel Montaño, Maria "Sandra" Montaño, 28, and Petra "Claudia" Montaño, 25, during a family gathering in Marysville earlier this year.

    Photo Courtesy of the Montaño family

    From left Miguel Angel Montaño, Maria "Sandra" Montaño, 28, and Petra "Claudia" Montaño, 25, during a family gathering in Marysville earlier this year.

  • Yareli Morales Montaño, 4, with her sister Ashley Morales Montaño ,7, at a Thanksgiving family gathering in 2007.

    Photo Courtesy of the Montaño family

    Yareli Morales Montaño, 4, with her sister Ashley Morales Montaño ,7, at a Thanksgiving family gathering in 2007.

SNOHOMISH – Police are now nearly sure that the fire that killed a Snohomish family was started accidentally.

“We are 90 percent certain this was not an arson fire,” Snohomish Police Chief John Turner said today.

Investigators have narrowed down the location in the mobile home where the fatal Sept. 30 fire started, he said.

A makeshift heater and a power strip were found where fire investigators believe the blaze started, Turner said.

“Power supplies have a history of overheating,” the police chief said.

Additional analysis still is underway to help investigators come to a definitive conclusion on the fire’s cause.

Investigators had considered the fire suspicious: A specially trained dog detected signs of a flammable accelerant at the mobile home. Test results are still pending to determine what the dog might have sniffed.

The victims were Maria "Sandra" Montaño, 28; her daughters Ashley, 7, and Yareli, 4; and her sister, Petra "Claudia" Montaño, 25.

The early morning blaze killed the family as they slept.

Federal immigration officials arrested the man who sold the mobile home to the family for $4,000 in late September, days before the fatal fire. He’s being held in a federal detention center for possessing fraudulent immigration documents and living illegally in the county, according to a complaint filed Thursday in U.S. District Court in Seattle.

Police were interested in the man early on during the fire investigation.

“We did want to talk to him,” Turner said. “He’s not a person of interest at this point in time.”
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