Southeast DC

‘He came back': Suspect in deadly DC arson returned after multiple calls to police

The Metropolitan Police Department responded to calls at the home on 23rd Street SE four times in four days before the fire

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Four calls in four days to the same house on 23rd Street SE in Washington, D.C.: a domestic fight, broken windows and small fires suspected of being deliberately set.

One call came just two hours before the raging blaze that trapped and ultimately overcame the home’s three occupants as they slept early Sunday.

At a press conference, questions emerged about how the fatal fire could have happened, given that police were already looking for the suspect in the earlier incidents, 56-year-old Robert Simpson.

Court documents in the case indicate 34-year-old victim Jessica Cunningham told officers called to the home Oct. 2 that she and Simpson had been fighting over relationship issues.

At one point, they had both lived in the home, along with 64-year-old victim Ronald McKinnon and his mother, 84-year-old Marion McKinnon, who also died in the fire.

Documents indicate the repeated targeting of the red brick home in the days and hours before the fatal fire left the occupants terrified of Simpson.

Victims called police multiple times before the fatal fire

Residents called police on Saturday night for a broken window. About two hours later, officers returned for a report of a fire at the rear of the house. They arrived and saw a fire in a trash can already was extinguished. The residents told police Simpson intentionally set the fire.

Overnight, at about 3:40 a.m. Sunday, a resident called police and said Simpson had assaulted her earlier that day.

Cunningham managed to make a 911 call as she was trapped Sunday morning, screaming for help, saying, “He came back! The house is on fire!”

D.C. Fire and EMS were called to the fire about 5:30 a.m. and arrived within minutes.

Metropolitan Police Department Chief Pamela Smith was asked why officers did not maintain a presence at the house to ensure the victims' safety.

“It's my understanding that based on what we know at this point, that the officers remained in that area for well over an hour,” she said.

Adding to the layers of tragedy, News4 has learned Cunningham lost her two little daughters, ages 1 and 6-months-old, in a house fire in Tennessee in 2016. The fire was later determined to have been deliberately set by the children’s grandmother.

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