Assisted-living facility owner and inspector sue each other over faulty sprinklers in deadly fire

Facility owners and inspectors trade accusations over recalled sprinkler heads and missed warnings after the state’s deadliest fire in decades

Roughly 70 people lived at the Gabriel House assisted living facility in Fall River before a fire broke out on Sunday, July 13, 2025.
Roughly 70 people lived at the Gabriel House assisted living facility in Fall River before a fire broke out on Sunday, July 13, 2025.
Lindsey Poole / Ocean State Media
Share
Roughly 70 people lived at the Gabriel House assisted living facility in Fall River before a fire broke out on Sunday, July 13, 2025.
Roughly 70 people lived at the Gabriel House assisted living facility in Fall River before a fire broke out on Sunday, July 13, 2025.
Lindsey Poole / Ocean State Media
Assisted-living facility owner and inspector sue each other over faulty sprinklers in deadly fire
Copy

A safety inspection company and the owner of a Massachusetts assisted-living facility that was the site of a fatal fire that killed 10 people are blaming each other for failing to address a faulty sprinkler system.

Inspector Fire Systems Inc. sued Gabriel House owner Dennis Etzkorn, claiming it notified the facility months before the fire about recalled sprinklers that needed to be replaced. Etzkorn filed a cross claim on Monday, alleging that Fire Systems Inc. had failed for years to properly inspect and test the sprinklers at Gabriel House.

Questions surfaced following a July 2025 fire about whether the facility’s sprinkler system functioned properly. Fire Systems Inc. said in a statement that in September 2024 one of its inspectors “did identify fire sprinkler heads installed at Gabriel House that had been the subject of a manufacturer recall and might not operate in the event of a fire.”

Gabriel House’s court filing Monday stated that as “a result of the failure of the sprinkler system at Gabriel House to function properly, the fire and the resulting heat and smoke from the fire were not contained to that one room and spread throughout the facility.” It said Gabriel House anticipated that Fire Systems Inc. would try to shift responsibility to the facility for failing to replace the sprinklers.

“FSI conducted inspections at Gabriel House in February 2025, April 2025, and on July 8, 2025, five days before the fire, and certified that no deficiencies or required actions with the sprinklers existed,” Etzkorn said in a statement.

Messages seeking comment were left with representatives for Fire Systems Inc.

The fire was the state’s deadliest in more than four decades. Documents obtained by The Associated Press in the aftermath of the fire showed a history of troubles at the facility, including a period in which it was barred from accepting new residents until it corrected problems with resident mistreatment.

The facility has also been the subject of lawsuits from residents in the aftermath of the fire. Investigators have said the cause of the fire was unintentional and may have originated with someone smoking or an electrical issue with an oxygen machine.

This story was punlished initially by the Associated Press.

Rhode Island AG’s cold case unit finally delivers results, clearing its first two homicides
Plus: Your last chance to catch this year’s Jack-o-Lantern Spectacular at the Roger Williams Park Zoo
At Alfred Lima Elementary School, a student-run news crew is flipping the narrative on Providence’s public schools — interviewing state leaders, reporting in two languages, and sharing their stories with the world
Mayor Brett Smiley discusses how his administration is tackling the city’s biggest issues — from the housing shortage and SNAP crisis to community trust in police — as he looks ahead to a 2026 re-election bid
USDA says it will not send out food stamp money in November due to the federal shutdown. Now, Rhode Islanders are grappling with how to make ends meet