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Tag: Detroit Fire Department

  • Detroit fire official undermines 2008 murder case in surfaced video – Detroit Metro Times

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    This is the seventh installment in “Exploring Integrity: Reviewing Wrongful Conviction Remedies,” a series examining the impact of conviction integrity units on the American judicial system’s rate of wrongful conviction. Presented by the O’Brien Fellowship in Public Service Journalism, the investigation is supported by Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

    Detroit’s top man at the Fire Department still hasn’t broken public silence about one of his career’s most high-profile cases — but he came closer to it than ever on Thursday.

    Commissioner Charles “Chuck” Simms avoided a subpoena to testify in a hearing for Mario Willis, who’s widely believed to have been wrongfully convicted in a firefighter’s 2008 murder, after a prosecutor said Simms acknowledged conducting an interview that supports Willis’s innocence claim.

    Willis, wearing Wayne County Jail clothing, attentively listened as Amanda Smith said the city official who Willis and his supporters have repeatedly asked to come forward about the 2009 interview finally confirmed the authenticity of a video recording of the interview. Simms was an arson investigator in the death of Walter Harris, a well-regarded first responder, who died after Willis’s employee Darian Dove admitted to accidentally setting 7418 East Kirby ablaze while entertaining a woman. Dove later changed his account, saying Detroit Police detectives threatened him into claiming Willis paid him to set the fire.

    Detroit firefighter Walter Harris was killed in a Nov. 15, 2008 blaze. Credit: Courtesy photo

    During Willis’s second-degree murder trial in 2010 Detective Scott Shea testified that neither Willis nor his wife Megan had offered an alibi for their activities on Nov. 15, 2008, the night of the blaze, but Willis and his defense team say the Simms video proves otherwise.

    “That was not revealed or played for the jury at any time, and that’s the difference,” Willis’s co-counsel Craig Daly told Third Judicial Court Judge Margaret Van Houten on Thursday.

    In the video, Simms identifies himself to Willis before saying, “You remember what you told me, right? … I remember you told me y’all went out that night. Y’all went out to dinner or something.”

    A clip of the exchange can be viewed at the website justiceformariowillis.com.

    Detroit Fire Commissioner Charles Simms. Credit: Bill Proctor

    At root of the discussion between Daly, with co-counsel Wolf Mueller and Smith, the assistant Wayne County prosecutor who said Simms acknowledges conducting the interview, is a possible Brady violation, which occurs when prosecutors hide evidence that could help a defendant. The Simms interview was saved to a police department disc labeled “Megan,” Daly told the court, after detectives recorded a conversation with Willis’s wife. The video camera, aimed over Simms’s shoulder, had not been turned off before Willis sat with Simms in an empty interrogation room that neither man knew Megan Willis had occupied.

    Simms ignored repeated requests to discuss the video in 2022 when Metro Times began investigating Willis’s claims of innocence. Through an assistant, Simms asked Metro Times for details about the footage, but never agreed to be interviewed after learning that his conversation with Willis was recorded.

    Several months later, when WDIV Channel 4’s Devin Scillian reported on Willis’s possible innocence, Simms was silent again. City of Detroit spokesman John Roach instead deflected questions about the video, saying the fire department wasn’t responsible for Willis’s fate.

    Willis disagrees.

    “The prosecution rested on that,” he told Metro Times in an earlier phone interview from Saginaw Correctional Facility. “One of the last things they said was that I tried to deceive the court by telling Megan to lie on the witness stand and say we were together that night.”

    He added, “That hurt me even more than Dove.”

    Willis says he hadn’t remembered what he and Megan had done Nov. 15, 2008, since the interview with Simms took place eight months after the fire, but Simms validated what the couple had already told police. Despite the charge that he’d only paid Dove to start the fire, Judge Michael Callahan even cited “perjury” when sentencing Willis to prison.

    Maxine Willis, Mario’s mother, shared with Metro Times a 2023 letter to Commissioner Simms, directly appealing for his help, in which she wrote: “Post conviction, a withheld interrogation video was discovered between you and my son that shows you were made aware of the exact alibi information provided at trial… In our efforts to have the complete truth established on record, we are calling upon you NOW, to please confirm the information my son provided you. As a fire commissioner, I’m sure you took an oath which includes to accept responsibility for your actions and for the consequences of your actions.”

    Simms never replied, she said.

    Thursday’s stipulation that Simms, 15 years later, has verified Willis’s statement of an alibi followed three days of cross-examination of fire expert Marc Fennell that began in December. The prosecution spent hours of the hearing, questioning dozens of details in Fennell’s testimony that science supports Dove’s confession: An accident, not an arson, killed Walter Harris.

    Maxine Willis believes her son, Mario Willis, was wrongfully sentenced following the 2008 blaze that killed Detroit firefighter Walter Harris. Credit: Kelley O’Neill

    Mueller, who initially called on Fennell to testify, followed the cross-examination by asking the Grand Rapids-based consultant and ex-firefighter if he found credible Detroit Fire Department Captain Rance Dixon’s statements that he’d never heard the name Darian Dove before last month. Fennell described firefighters as “family,” saying their bond compels interest in details of what led to a loss or tragedy within their ranks.

    Despite intense media coverage in 2010, and a heavy presence of firefighters and Harris supporters in and out of the courtroom at Willis’s trial, Dixon — who investigated the scene at 7418 East Kirby — testified last month that he didn’t learn Dove was in the house until Willis’s current hearing began.

    “Did you find that astounding?” Mueller asked Fennell.

    “I was shocked, yes,” Fennell replied. 

    In 2023 the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office Conviction Integrity Unit reviewed Willis’s case, but denied his request for exoneration.


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    Eddie B. Allen Jr.

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  • Expert testimony casts doubt on 2008 arson case that sent Detroit man to prison – Detroit Metro Times

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    This is the sixth installment in “Exploring Integrity: Reviewing Wrongful Conviction Remedies,” a series examining the impact of conviction integrity units on the American judicial system’s rate of wrongful conviction. Presented by the O’Brien Fellowship in Public Service Journalism, the investigation is supported by Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

    The meeting should have happened in 2008.

    Detroit Fire Department Capt. Rance Dixon’s findings about a deadly eastside blaze could have potentially saved a man from being sent to prison if Dixon had spoken with a single witness.

    But he didn’t know the witness existed.

    Dixon, a former arson investigator, testified this week in a Third Judicial Court of Michigan hearing to determine if Mario Willis, convicted in the 2008 homicide of firefighter Walter Harris, will receive a new trial and possible exoneration. Dixon told Willis’s defense attorney Wolf Mueller that he only learned in court Dec. 10 — during Mueller’s questioning — that Darian Dove had confessed to accidentally torching the house, which caused Harris’s death.

    After stressing the National Fire Protection Association 921 professional guidelines and method of determining fire cause and origin, which Dixon said he observed, Mueller referenced earlier testimony that Dixon wished he’d known about claims that gasoline was stored in the home.

    “Yeah, I wish I would have known about Darian Dove, too,” Dixon said.

    Darian Dove is grilled during a hearing at the Third Judicial Court of Michigan. Credit: Robyn Ussery

    Once a handyman hired by Willis, Dove testified earlier in the hearing, disputing initial confessions that he took a woman to 7418 East Kirby Street and accidentally destroyed the house after starting a small fire to keep warm. Dixon acknowledged that he hadn’t been able to adhere to the highest standard of scientific methodology in fire investigation, since he was unaware that Dove had been in the home, and had no way to test Dove’s original story versus an arson theory.

    Dixon filed a six-page report Nov. 16, 2008, the day after the fire, and made no supplements to his conclusion that the fire was deliberate. He testified that he didn’t even hear the name Darian Dove until three months after Willis’s trial, during which Dove fulfilled a plea bargain by saying Willis paid him to set the blaze, in order to collect an insurance policy payment.

    “An expert’s opinion is only as good as the data to support it. Is that right?” Mueller asked Dixon.

    Dixon agreed, saying that he never located any witnesses at the scene of the blaze, nor inquired whether police detectives located witnesses or suspects. Dove had told detectives he fled 7418 East Kirby and called the fire department. He said he “broke out crying” when he learned that Harris died after battling the flames.

    Detroit firefighter Walter Harris was killed in a Nov. 15, 2008 blaze. Credit: Courtesy photo

    Friday morning, Marc Fennell, an internationally renowned, Michigan-based fire investigator and analyst, testified, pro bono, as an expert in support of Willis, further challenging Dixon’s conclusion of arson.

    “It’s undetermined,” said Fennell. “Absolutely it is, yes.”

    Among several theories, in addition to the lack of Dove’s initial account of the accident, Fennell disputed Dixon’s association with the smell of gasoline at the scene with a deliberate burning. The “mopping up” process that firefighters use, including seeking “hot spots” after a fire is contained, plus other measures, involves gas-powered equipment, Fennell said. Ironically, equipment designed to help rescue Harris, who’d collapsed under the roof, might have even caused the odor, he added.

    “It is mass chaos…faster than NASCAR at a pit stop,” said Fennell, an ex-firefighter.

    Regarding Dixon’s testimony, Mueller asked Fennell: “He didn’t even do the first basic step of the scientific method — consider an alternative hypothesis. Fair?”

    Fennell agreed.

    Also discussed was the lack of an expert at Willis’s original trial. Fennell repeatedly testified that a qualified advisor to Willis’s lawyer, Wright Blake, would have been valuable to Willis’s defense in 2010.

    “Clearly you would be able to tell a jury, based on common sense and your scientific background, that this fire was not incendiary,” Mueller asked.

    “Correct,” Fennell replied.

    Lack of follow-up documentation, such as photographs of certain areas of the 2008 scene, he added, also helped hinder proper conclusions about the tragedy that left Harris dead and sent Willis to prison.

    “That’s why I don’t understand why, investigating fires, there’s such a rush,” said Fennell. “The fire’s not going anywhere. Do it right.”

    Assistant Wayne County Prosecutor Amanda Smith began cross-examining Fennell before the hearing was adjourned until Jan. 7, 2026.

    Since his conviction, Willis, 44, has served at the Saginaw Correctional Facility, where he remains incarcerated, pending the hearing’s outcome.

    In 2023 the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office Conviction Integrity Unit reviewed Willis’s case, but denied his request for exoneration.


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    Eddie B. Allen Jr.

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  • Detroit arson investigator padded hours for years and supervisors failed to stop him, OIG finds – Detroit Metro Times

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    A Detroit fire lieutenant illegally padded his paycheck by submitting time sheets for hours he never worked, and his supervisors failed to stop it, according to a new investigation from the city’s Office of Inspector General.

    The OIG found that Lt. James Hill-Harris, an arson investigator, “fraudulently overstated his hours worked by more than 150 hours,” relying on time sheets that didn’t match key-card activity, cellphone data, or daily activity logs at Detroit Public Safety Headquarters. The discrepancies date back as far as 2018.

    In some instances, investigators found Hill-Harris was at home or even outside Detroit during hours he claimed to be on duty. Detroit Police Internal Affairs, which conducted its own review after the case was referred for criminal consideration, wrote that the data showed “a consistent pattern of Lieutenant Hill-Harris being at home or outside the City during hours he had reported as worked.”

    A six-month stretch of payroll records between 2022 and 2023 showed he claimed 622 hours of overtime, including “43 hours of overtime in a single week.” Investigators estimated he may have received more than $120,800 in income tied to hours he didn’t work over a four-year span.

    His father, Walter Harris, died fighting a deliberately set fire in 2008, which Hill-Harris said inspired him to become an arson investigator in 2011.

    Based on the allegations, the Michigan Commission on Law Enforcement Standards (MCOLES), which handles licensing for police, including arson investigators, stripped Hill-Harris of his certification. 

    Hill-Harris denied committing time fraud and denied missing work when he was on duty. 

    “Working remotely, work stacking, and clocking in/out from outside the City of Detroit network were widespread, accepted, and sometimes mandated practices within the unit,” his attorney Robert Burton-Harris is quoted as saying. “Mr. Hill-Harris is being singled out for engaging in practices that are common in the unit.”

    The OIG also found that two supervisors — Chief Dennis Richardson and Captain Rance Dixon — failed to perform basic oversight that should have caught the fraud.

    Richardson and Dixon “abused their authority by neglecting their supervisory responsibilities which contributed to a lack of accountability” for Hill-Harris’s overtime, the OIG wrote. The agency said both men approved or allowed time submissions without the documentation required under Detroit Fire Department rules.

    Interviews conducted by Internal Affairs indicated Hill-Harris’s attendance problems were well-known in the unit. Multiple investigators described “longstanding attendance issues … that had gone unaddressed by unit supervisors,” and some said they believed “a personal friendship” between Richardson and Hill-Harris contributed to the lack of accountability.

    Richardson disputed showing favoritism but acknowledged in a recorded OIG hearing that he did “a little digging” and found that several members of the unit, including captains and lieutenants, were clocking in and out of work remotely outside of the City of Detroit network.” He described the noncompliance as “widespread across the unit.” 

    He said he relied on captains to verify time sheets and did not consider it his responsibility to scrutinize lieutenants’ hours.

    Dixon did not respond to the OIG’s draft findings and is considered not to have contested them.

    In June 2023, the OIG referred the investigation to the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office, which requested an investigation from the Detroit Police Department. The Detroit Fire Department also conducted an internal investigation. 

    Although DPD “confirmed a consistent pattern” of “Harris being at home or outside the city during hours he had reported at work,” the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office declined to pursue criminal charges, citing insufficient evidence to meet the standard of proof beyond a reasonable doubt. The OIG emphasized its own administrative standard is lower and only requires that the allegations are “more likely than not” — a threshold that was clearly met, according to the report.

    Even without criminal charges, Hill-Harris faced consequences. The Detroit Police Department sought to strip his law-enforcement certification, and on June 4, 2025, MCOLES permanently revoked it for “egregious misconduct involving his lack of accountability.”

    In an interview with Metro Times, Detroit Fire Commissioner Chuck Simms says he fired Hill-Harris, but that decision was reversed after the fire union “provided some additional evidence on his behalf.” Hill-Harris was demoted two ranks and is back to fighting fires. 

    Simms says he took the allegations seriously and took several steps to prevent overtime fraud. The fire department hired a full-time civilian payroll manager, requires prior approval for overtime, conducts biweekly audits to determine if there are any payroll discrepancies, and mandated that employees physically clock in and out. As a result, Simms says, “We’re trending to have the lowest overtime in five years because of the safeguards.”

    Inspector General Kamau C. Marable praised the work of Detroit police. 

    “We appreciate the thorough work of DPD, whose investigation greatly supported the OIG in completing our case,” Marable said. “Their partnership was instrumental in helping us identify time fraud and protect integrity in City operations.”


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    Steve Neavling

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