Fire examiners have been opining about the cause of fires for years. Often they are employed primarily by
insurance companies.
How can they tell if a fire was caused by arson? For years, fire investigators
were taught to look for key "indicators." Crazed glass, melted copper wiring, and melted steel were all
said to indicate an unusually hot fire, consistent with the use of accelerants. Uneven burn patterns were
said to reflect multiple ignition points, another indicator of arson. This conventional wisdom of fire
investigation appears in textbooks and provided a "scientific" basis for expert testimony in thousands of cases.
More recent research suggests that much of the conventional wisdom of fire
investigators is simply wrong. An analysis of 50 homes burned the 1991 Oakland Hills fire (a wild fire)
showed a high frequency of traditional "arson indicators" where arson clearly had not occurred (Lentini, 1992).
Fire investigators failed to realized the error in their conventional wisdom
because there have been few careful, empirical studies of the results of "naturally occurring" fires.
All of which raises serious questions about which opinions (if any) of fire investigators should be
treated as "scientific knowledge."
TWGFEX Scene Investigator Survey 2000Details the national spread of experts, training requirements, experience levels, etc. More (raw) data available at http://www.ncfs.ucf.edu/twgfex/doclib.html
TWGFEX Fire Debris and Explosives Analyst SurveyResults of 1999 survey of fire debris laboratories--data on locations, training requirements, quality assurance, etc. More (raw) data available at http://www.ncfs.ucf.edu/twgfex/doclib.html.