LOS ANGELES – This Monday marks the commencement of a federal arson trial against the individual accused of igniting last year’s catastrophic Palisades Fire. As the region faces a long road to recovery, the repercussions of the blaze continue to echo in the Los Angeles mayoral race.
Jonathan Rinderknecht, 29, has entered a plea of not guilty to allegations that he initiated one of California’s most devastating wildfires. Prosecutors allege that Rinderknecht set a fire on January 1, 2025, which smoldered undetected within root systems before reigniting on January 7.
The Palisades Fire claimed the lives of 12 individuals and obliterated thousands of homes, ravaging hillside communities in Pacific Palisades and Malibu. If convicted, Rinderknecht could face a minimum sentence of five years for charges including malicious destruction through fire.
Defense attorney Steve Haney argues that Rinderknecht is being unjustly blamed for the Los Angeles Fire Department’s failure to completely extinguish the initial January 1 blaze. Jury selection is anticipated to span several days, with opening statements slated to begin midweek. The trial is expected to last approximately two weeks.
The trial has sparked varied responses from Pacific Palisades residents, who have spent the past 18 months navigating insurance claims and bureaucratic hurdles in their efforts to rebuild and restore their lives.
“It brings back all the emotions from the past year, reminding me of the suffering and upheaval experienced by our neighbors and friends,” expressed Meghan Wald, one of the few whose homes survived in her neighborhood.
Palisades streets are now crowded with construction vehicles and workers, and charred trees have recovered their luscious green. But vacant lots abound, filled with weeds and wildflowers and the skeletal frames of homes. Of the more than 450 construction projects, only 17 homes have been certified for occupancy.
Wald and her family now live in nearby Brentwood, but she visits weekly to support the handful of businesses that have reopened, including her hair salon, her usual CVS pharmacy and the Palisades Garden Cafe, where her kids used to grab snacks after school.
“It’s great to see the shops that we know and love coming back,” Wald said. “It’s also hard to imagine what it’s going to be like. It will never be the same.”
The fire has been a central theme in incumbent Mayor Karen Bass ‘s reelection bid as she defends the city’s recovery process. Bass was in Ghana as part of a presidential delegation when the flames ignited. One of her challengers, reality TV personality Spencer Pratt, lost his home in the blaze and has made what he calls municipal ineptitude a central campaign message. It’s not yet clear if Pratt won enough votes in the primary to face Bass in November’s runoff election.
Judge Anne Hwang has ruled that the defense can’t introduce evidence or arguments about alleged negligence by the fire department, saying it was irrelevant and could confuse the jury.
Defense attorneys had planned to include testimony from a firefighter that the earlier fire was visibly smoldering when first responders left the scene. That was gathered as part of a civil lawsuit filed by fire victims against the city.
Haney said he also plans to argue that the government lacks solid evidence or witness testimony linking Rinderknecht to the first fire, and that first responders heard fireworks in the vicinity of where the blaze started.
Prosecutors say geolocation data from Rinderknecht’s phone shows that he was in the area of the fire as it rapidly grew, and investigators later seized a Bic barbecue lighter from his car that he admitted to having with him on the trail. They will claim he was upset about a failed relationship as well as thwarted plans for New Year’s Eve, and that he ranted to his Uber passengers that evening about being angry at the world, according to an April 29 pretrial memo filed by the U.S. attorney’s office.
Lena Loh, who opened a skin care clinic in the Palisades three months before the fire, said Rinderknecht’s prosecution gives her no sense of relief. She has been struggling to reopen and is looking to leave because she can’t sustain the business financially anymore.
“I don’t necessarily think putting him on trial is gonna fix anything,” she said. “This is a city issue. The city needed to manage that small speck of fire better.”