St. Petersburg Fire & Rescue
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Published: June 4, 2008
Updated: 06/04/2008 09:37 am
ST. PETERSBURG - A state lawmaker whose house burned down early this morning is returning with his wife and children from vacation in Virginia to assess the damage.
The fire broke out about 12:30 a.m. at the home of Rick Kriseman, 6044 Third Ave. N., said St. Petersburg Fire and Rescue spokesman Rick Feinberg.
The family's two Labrador retrievers, one yellow and one black, suffered from smoke inhalation and burns. One had severe burns on its feet.
Kriseman, a Democrat serving his first term in the state Legislature, had been visiting Colonial Williamsburg with his wife and two children.
Investigators are leaning toward an electrical malfunction of some kind as the cause of the fire and will work with an electrical engineer and insurance adjuster on a final determination.
"This is a sad day for Kriseman and his family," Kevin King, the lawmaker's legislative assistant, said this morning at the fire scene. "They are doing the best they can to put this into perspective and be thankful that no one is hurt and the dogs will soon be OK."
Firefighters stepped through a doorway of the burning house to bring the two dogs outside. The animals were given oxygen at the scene and taken to a veterinary clinic, where they were being treated this morning.
"I don't think they could find their way out," King said. The family adopted the animals from a rescue group.
A dog-sitter and Kriseman's mother-in-law had been stopping by the house to check on the animals, King said.
The Kriseman family had been on vacation about five days.
There are no indications of arson, Feinberg said, and the fire appears to have started in the attic. Firefighters found flames in the attic running the length of the house.
St. Petersburg Fire and Rescue, the St. Petersburg Police Department and the state fire marshal's office were at the site throughout the night.
Kriseman, an attorney, has represented District 53 in the House since 2006 after serving six years as a St. Petersburg City Council member.
He has been in the news recently for calling on Florida environmental officials to explain a series of delays in cleaning up groundwater pollution identified more than 13 years ago at a west St. Petersburg defense plant now owned by Raytheon Network Centric Systems.
Reporter Stephen Thompson can be reached at (813) 215-3582 or sthompson@tampatrib.com.
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