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News Summary

Man pulled from burning home likely died of smoke inhalation

Rockford Drive resident is first fire fatality in city in more than a year

By Dave Greber

Staff Writer

Thursday, January 08, 2009

HAMILTON — Jason "Jake" Fields was likely asleep with his dog early Wednesday morning, Jan. 7, when a fire started in his living room, officials said.

Neighbors called 911 at about 6:35 a.m. Wednesday and reported smoke coming from Fields' 521 Rockford Drive home.

Upon arrival, firefighters quickly extinguished the flames, but said the house was heavily filled with smoke, which indicates a smoldering fire, according to Hamilton Fire Investigator Tom Angst.

Fire investigators said Fields, 32, was found dead in the hallway just eight feet from his bed. His dog, a boxer, also was found dead in the bedroom. No one else was at the home when the fire started, Angst said.

"It looked like he threw back the covers and tried to get out and didn't make it," Angst said. "He basically got out of his bedroom door."

Angst said Fields was a heavy smoker, and that early investigations showed the fire likely began on a couch in the living room of his ranch-style home. He also said the home was equipped with smoke detectors, and that the devices held batteries. Whether the batteries were functional, though, remains in question.

"I've ruled out everything except careless smoking," Angst said.

The Butler County Coroner's office said preliminary findings suggest Fields died of smoke inhalation, although he also sustained minor burns. The office also is looking into whether alcohol was also a factor in the fire.

Hamilton Fire Chief Joseph Schutte said emergency responders were quick to pull Fields from the burning home upon their arrival, perform CPR and transport him to The Fort Hamilton Hospital.

But hospital officials later told members of the fire department Fields had died.

"He was a nice man," said Rosa Conley, who has lived across the street from Fields for the past two years. "He would help anybody, and do anything for anybody. But he was kind of a wild guy."

Another neighbor said she was out walking her dog at about 6 a.m. and didn't see or smell anything.

Throughout the morning, as the scent of smoke still clung to the flurry-filled air, neighbors walking along Rockford Drive inquired about Jake and uttered gasps of disbelief when they were told he had died.

Fields' death is the first fire-related fatality in Hamilton since Dec. 12, 2007. On that day, 12-year-old DeMarcus Thomas was killed in a fire in his Hueston Street home, Schutte said.

Thomas, an Adams Elementary sixth-grader and a linebacker for the Little Blue football team, died of smoke inhalation.

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