Jury selection began Monday in the federal trial of Jonathan Rinderknecht, a 30-year-old Florida man accused of starting a New Year's Day brush fire that later reignited into the catastrophic Palisades Fire, one of the deadliest and most destructive wildfires in California history. The blaze, which occurred in January 2025, claimed 12 lives and destroyed thousands of homes across Pacific Palisades and Malibu in Los Angeles County.
Rinderknecht faces federal charges of arson and malicious destruction by fire and has pleaded not guilty. Prosecutors allege that Rinderknecht, a former Pacific Palisades resident despondent over a failed relationship and ruined New Year's Eve plans, hiked up the Skull Rock trail in Topanga State Park just after midnight on January 1, 2025, and intentionally set the fire.
Geolocation data from his phone placed him at the origin site as the fire expanded, and authorities later seized a Bic lighter from his vehicle, which he admitted to carrying on the trail. The initial blaze, dubbed the Lachman Fire, was suppressed by the Los Angeles Fire Department but continued to smolder undetected in subterranean root systems until January 7, 2025, when a historic Santa Ana windstorm re-ignited the embers, leading to a fast-moving wildfire that swept through coastal hillside neighborhoods.
Prosecutors claim Rinderknecht remained at the scene to watch first responders before logging into his Uber app to accept fares; passengers described him as angry and ranting about being "pissed off at the world." Defense attorney Steven Haney argues that the government lacks direct evidence or eyewitnesses linking Rinderknecht to the ignition point and maintains that first responders reported hearing fireworks in the area. U.S.
District Judge Anne Hwang barred the defense from arguing that the fire department was negligent and also blocked prosecutors from presenting AI-generated images found on Rinderknecht's phone depicting dystopian scenes of crowds fleeing flames. Opening arguments are scheduled for Wednesday, and the trial is expected to last about two weeks.