Kingston man admits setting fire at Blue Water Inn

KINGSTON — A 60-year-old Kingston man told investigators he set the fire at the Blue Water Inn early Feb. 9, and was in Kitsap County Jail later that day on $100,000 bail.

The man, who had been staying at the inn, was detained at 4:30 a.m. by Kitsap County sheriff’s deputies for questioning, sheriff’s spokesman Deputy Scott Wilson reported.

The fire forced the evacuation of the Blue Water Inn on Highway 104 in Kingston. There were no injuries reported.

“Firefighters were able to limit most damage to [the] building of origin,” North Kitsap Fire &Rescue spokeswoman Michele Laboda reported.

Dylan Umphress was awakened by a loud bang on the floor above his room. Then, the sound of crackling and the smell of smoke.

“The whole room above me was on fire,” Umphress said.

At 8:33 a.m., about five hours after guests of the 21-room motel were evacuated, Umphress and his girlfriend, Tanya Bodni, were in their car across the street as the American Red Cross worked to find accommodations for them and other evacuees.

Umphress said an upstairs guest had been acting strangely that night. Umphress was awakened by the sound of a man banging on a room door, followed by a verbal exchange. Umphress said he went back to sleep and, about 10 minutes later, “I heard a loud boom and crackling above us.”

The back corner of the hotel was on fire — “the whole back end of it,” Umphress said. He called the front desk and the staff went door to door evacuating the hotel.

“They did a real good job getting everybody out,” Umphress said.

Umphress said he used to own a home in Kingston and now lives in Seattle. He was in town to go through his storage unit across the street. Meanwhile, personal possessions that they brought with them remained in their hotel room.

At 3:44 a.m., an emergency call was made to North Kitsap Fire &Rescue for what was believed to be a brushfire. When firefighters arrived on the scene, they discovered it was a fire in the back annex of the inn, Laboda reported.

‘Home to several residents’

Six hotel rooms are uninhabitable, Laboda said. The exterior of the main front building sustained minor smoke and heat damage.

Battalion Chief Steve Murray and crew were the first to arrive and they got the fire under control within 10 to 20 minutes, and fully extinguished 10 minutes after that, Laboda reported.

Highway 104 was closed for approximately two hours; motorists were detoured onto nearby roads.

When crews arrived, they found “significant fire on both ends of the upstairs building,” Laboda reported.

“Red Cross is currently on scene to assist both visiting occupants as well as permanent occupants of the hotel, to find both permanent and temporary housing while the investigation takes place. The 20-unit hotel is home to multiple residents. I want to recognize the owner and manager of the Blue Water. He was banging on doors and making circuits around the building even before the fire department arrived.”

— With reporting by Sophie Bonomi

North Kitsap Fire & Rescue firefighters were able to limit most damage at Blue Water Inn early Feb. 9. (Michele Laboda / NKF&R)

North Kitsap Fire & Rescue firefighters were able to limit most damage at Blue Water Inn early Feb. 9. (Michele Laboda / NKF&R)

Kingston man admits setting fire at Blue Water Inn

North Kitsap Fire & Rescue firefighters were able to limit most damage at Blue Water Inn early Feb. 9. (Michele Laboda / NKF&R)

Kingston man admits setting fire at Blue Water Inn

North Kitsap Fire & Rescue firefighters were able to limit most damage at Blue Water Inn early Feb. 9. (Michele Laboda / NKF&R)

Kingston man admits setting fire at Blue Water Inn

North Kitsap Fire & Rescue firefighters were able to limit most damage at Blue Water Inn early Feb. 9. (Michele Laboda / NKF&R)

Kingston man admits setting fire at Blue Water Inn

North Kitsap Fire & Rescue firefighters were able to limit most damage at Blue Water Inn early Feb. 9. (Michele Laboda / NKF&R)

Kingston man admits setting fire at Blue Water Inn

North Kitsap Fire & Rescue firefighters were able to limit most damage at Blue Water Inn early Feb. 9. (Michele Laboda / NKF&R)

Tags: