Massive Orem house fire being investigated as arson


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Orem fire investigators suspect arson in a house fire that destroyed an empty home.
  • Investigators are seeking information about a person who questioned the developer before the fire.

OREM — A fire that destroyed an empty Orem home in a wooded area of the city is now being investigated as arson.

Orem Assistant Fire Chief Shaun Hirst said he had fire investigators on-site Friday, making contacts and asking questions. They said the circumstances around the fire are too suspicious to ignore.

The home that burned down is now just a pile of blacked remains, but new phone video shows on Tuesday, it was a blazing inferno. The fire came dangerously close to the house of Melissa Fukofuka, who lives next door.

She is angry after learning the fire may have been set on purpose.

"Yes, livid, yeah, livid. Why would someone do that? Other than personal vengeance and thinking just in their own world," Fukofuka said.

Orem fire investigators are looking into the fire as arson for several suspicious factors.

"One being the home was scheduled to be demolished, it was not occupied, and an individual approached the developer on scene, prior to the start of the fire," Hirst said.

He's referring to a conversation the developer told KSL-TV about. Just before he left that night, someone approached the property and asked what was going to happen to the house. Thirty minutes later, he received a call that the home was in flames.

Fukofuka said the house had been overrun for years by drug dealers, homeless, or property vandals, and believes any one of them could've been upset they were losing their favorite spot.

"I can understand the anger, but I don't understand to the point of setting it on fire. It's a very selfish thing to do," Fukofuka said.

She's grateful the fire didn't destroy her home, too.

"Incredibly blessed … it could've been a lot worse. We could've lost the back of our house or the whole house," she said.

Orem fire officials said they want to find whoever it was that talked to the developer just before the fire. Anyone who may have information is encouraged to contact Orem fire.

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Brian Carlson, KSLBrian Carlson
Brian Carlson is an award-winning Utah journalist, who has spent the last 16 years reporting in his hometown, but his time on television started much earlier than that. Born and raised in Utah, Brian got his first taste for on-air news at 8 years old being interviewed by KSL for knowing how to call 911 during an attempted home break-in. He began appearing regularly on TV in high school for an all-student run show on KUTV, then graduated from BYU in Broadcast Journalism. His professional TV career started in 2005 at KNDU in Kennewick, Washington. Brian moved back to Utah in 2008 reporting and anchoring for various shows at ABC4, and finally came to KSL in June 2024. In 2012, Brian won a regional Emmy for his report titled “Spice in the City,” in which Brian purchased drugs undercover and was instrumental in assisting police capture an illegal drug dealer. In 2014, Brian was the first TV reporter to tell the story of Ron Stallworth, a young black detective who infiltrated the KKK. Brian’s report became the catalyst to the Oscar award-winning film “BlacKkKlansman” directed by Spike Lee. In Brian’s career, he’s reported on everything from going behind the fire lines documenting the moment an elderly couple discovered they lost all they had in a Utah wildfire, to jumping out of an airplane, or gliding 57 mph down the Olympic skeleton track in Park City. Brian is also the only reporter to become an NBA mascot for a day, working with the former Utah Jazz Bear. Watching KSL5 News you can find Brian each week covering the latest news LIVE on location, including the devastating flooding in Orem, the Honie execution, or from the Utah GOP headquarters LIVE on election night, etc. Brian is happily married to his wife Liz and together they have an adorable son. He’s also stepfather to four children. Brian enjoys weightlifting, water sports, rock climbing, cheering on the BYU Cougars, and loves calling the Beehive State home.

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