Washington Examiner

Palisades fire suspect appears at evidentiary hearing ahead of trial

Jonathan rinderknecht, charged federally with arson for allegedly starting the January 2025 Palisades fire, appeared Monday for an evidentiary hearing before Judge Anne Hwang. The judge is considering motions that would determine which evidence and witness testimony can be used at Rinderknecht’s June trial, where he has pleaded not guilty.

Rinderknecht’s defense asked to introduce evidence from an earlier case involving ATF Special Agent Matthew Beals. In that prior matter, involving the 2020 USS *Bonhomme Richard* fire, a military court acquitted Seaman Ryan mays. The defense argued the two investigations share “exceptional” similarities and show a pattern or bias relevant to Beals’s credibility and methods. They also suggested prosecutors are using a motive theory-centering on a “young, discontented man” acting against institutional authority-that mirrors the government’s theory against rinderknecht and diverts attention from failures by the Navy, Los Angeles Fire Department, and California State parks.

Prosecutors, by contrast, said witnesses reported that Rinderknecht, an uber driver, was ranting to passengers about vigilante violence, capitalism, and the alleged assassination of UnitedHealthcare CEO Luigi Mangione. Court documents further allege Rinderknecht admired Mangione and sought online content about killing billionaires in the weeks before the fire.Investigators also claim he said arson in affluent Pacific Palisades would stem from resentment of the rich and likened it to the motive behind the Mangione case.

The hearing also addressed the defense’s request to exclude testimony from government expert Dr. Kevin Kelm,a behavioral analyst who would not testify about Rinderknecht specifically but about whether the case fits an arsonist behavioral profile. In addition, the defense sought leave to use video depositions of alleged eyewitness Ari Sallus, who has moved to the UK for veterinary school and cannot attend trial; the defense argues Sallus’s testimony is critical as it would support their claim that fireworks, not Rinderknecht, triggered the earlier Lachman fire.

Simultaneously occurring, prosecutors asked Judge Hwang to block the defense from calling three experts, arguing one retired arson detective lacks firefighting expertise needed to evaluate LAFD response, and challenging related geolocation and investigative evidence. jury selection is scheduled to begin June 9, and the charges carry a statutory maximum sentence of 45 years in federal prison.


Jonathan Rinderknecht, the suspect facing federal arson charges for allegedly starting the deadly Palisades fire of January 2025, appeared at an evidentiary hearing on Monday, where the judge overseeing the case deliberated the admissibility of certain evidence and witness testimony.

Rinderknecht, who has pleaded not guilty to setting off one of the most destructive and lethal wildfires in Los Angeles history, is scheduled to stand trial in June.

Judge Anne Hwang, an appointee of former President Joe Biden, heard a series of motions on Monday that would decide, depending on which way she rules in the following days, what exhibits are admissible at next month’s trial and who is allowed to testify.

Attorneys for Rinderknecht requested that Hwang permit the defense team to introduce as evidence a previous case involving ATF Special Agent Matthew Beals, one of the investigators in the current case against Rinderknecht.

Beals was the lead ATF agent in the arson investigation of Navy Seaman Ryan Mays, who was accused of igniting a 2020 fire aboard the USS Bonhomme Richard in San Diego, California. A military court acquitted Mays of all charges after a two-week trial.

“This prior investigation, prosecution, and acquittal bear extraordinary and unmistakable similarities to the investigation Agent Beals has conducted against Mr. Rinderknecht in the present case and, critically, reveals a pattern, motive, and systematic bias that is directly relevant to the jury’s assessment of Agent Beals’ credibility, methodology, and conclusions in this case,” Rinderknecht’s lawyers claimed.

The defense said the investigator in both cases “constructed a motive theory premised on a young, discontented man striking out against institutional authority,” while the resulting prosecution of the suspect served to “deflect scrutiny from the institutional failures of a government agency: the United States Navy in Mays, and the Los Angeles Fire Department and California State Parks in this case.”

Mays was an enlisted sailor who had failed to qualify for the Navy SEAL program. Officials suspected Mays resented authority and set the vessel ablaze as retaliation.

“This motive theory was eerily identical to the profile the government now deploys against Jonathan Rinderknecht in this case,” the defense asserted, suggesting that he is being used as a scapegoat for the Los Angeles Police Department’s failures to fully extinguish the blaze.

According to the prosecution, witnesses reported that Rinderknecht, an Uber driver, was ranting to passengers on New Year’s Eve about vigilante violence, capitalism, and alleged UnitedHealthcare CEO assassin Luigi Mangione.

In an interview with investigators, when asked why someone might commit arson in the affluent Pacific Palisades area, Rinderknecht allegedly responded that “it would be out of resentment of the rich enjoying their money as ‘we’re basically being enslaved by them’ and compared such an act of ‘desperation’ to the murder for which Mangione was charged.”

Court documents say Rinderknecht admired Mangione and sought out online content on “kill[ing] all the billionaires” in the weeks leading up to the Palisades fire.

Hwang also heard the defense’s request to exclude the testimony of government expert Dr. Kevin Kelm, a behavioral analyst known for identifying potential motives in arson cases. Kelm would not testify directly about Rinderknecht, but rather about whether the circumstances surrounding the case fit into the behavioral profile of an arsonist.

Rinderknecht’s attorneys additionally asked that Hwang allow them to take video deposition of an alleged eyewitness, Ari Sallus, who has relocated to the United Kingdom to attend veterinary school.

“Mr. Sallus is not a fugitive, a target, or a reluctant participant in a scheme,” the defense told Hwang. “He is a critical exculpatory witness whose geographic relocation — for reasons entirely unrelated to this prosecution — threatens to deprive the defendant of testimony that lies at the heart of the defense case.”

Rinderknecht’s lawyers say Sallus photographed the Lachman fire, an initial brush fire believed to have become the larger Palisades fire, just after midnight on Jan. 1, 2025.

His testimony, if permitted, would anchor the defense’s theory that the Lachman fire was sparked by fireworks, not Rinderknecht. According to the defense, Sallus intends to testify that he heard a loud bang similar to a mortar blast in the immediate area of the fire’s origin, saw a flash of light, and took a photograph of the first-known ignition of the Lachman fire.

Sallus, however, cannot attend the jury trial in June because his enrollment in veterinary school abroad “makes transatlantic travel during the trial window academically impossible,” the defense argued.

The government, meanwhile, asked Hwang to bar the defense from calling on three experts who would raise doubts about the accuracy of geolocation data extracted from Rinderknecht’s cellphone and the arson investigation itself.

PALISADES FIRE SUSPECT ESPOUSED LEFT-WING IDEOLOGY, PROSECUTORS SAY

Federal prosecutors said that one of the defense’s experts, a retired arson detective with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, has “no firefighting expertise whatsoever, rendering him unqualified to offer his opinions about the LAFD’s response.”

Jury selection is slated to start on June 9 in United States v. Rinderknecht. The charges carry a statutory maximum sentence of 45 years in federal prison.



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