Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and other authorities held them up as examples of irresponsible behavior. They were the butt of jokes. But one of the two Big Tujunga Canyon residents who jumped into a hot tub to escape the raging Station fire says they are being unfairly judged.
Julius Goff, who suffered serious burns, told The Times that he did not ignore a mandatory evacuation order but instead stayed behind to warn 10 neighbors who did not receive the order to leave. By the time he reached his own house, with plans to get his housemate and get out, the fire had surrounded them.
Trapped, the men ran screaming through 50-to-100-foot flames to what they saw as their best hope: the only pool of water within reach.
Later, Goff watched in tears from a hospital bed as they were repeatedly castigated on TV. Then he learned that everything he owned was lost in the fire.
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-station-fire-victims6-2009oct06,0,2333030.story
Julius Goff, right, who was seriously burned after he and a housemate took refuge in a hot tub, hugs Trevor Pullen, who was evacuated before the Station fire descended on their Big Tujunga Canyon neighborhood. "This guy saved my life," Pullen said. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times / October 5, 2009)