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Napanee residents recount fear and loss from fires caused by convicted arsonist

A year after Napanee Ont.'s old arena and a residential garage were destroyed by fires lit by Jay Bradley, residents spoke about the scars left after the flames.

Jay Bradley scheduled to be sentenced on Nov. 8

A man wearing glasses and a white T-shirt, as well as handcuffs, is escorted into an OPP van by two officers.
Jay Bradley leaves the Napanee, Ont. courthouse on Nov. 1, 2024. The 50-year-old has pleaded guilty to two counts of arson and one of criminal harassment for a pair of fires that destroyed the town's old arena and a home garage in October 2023. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

One year after a fire destroyed her garage and another consumed a nearby community centre, Carol McKinley says she hasn't been able to shake her fear. 

"I am now afraid of the dark — scared of what is out there," she told a crowded Napanee, Ont., courtroom on Friday. 

McKinley is president of the Lennox Agricultural Society, which puts on the town's fair every summer.

In the early hours of Oct. 23, 2023, she and her husband woke to an explosion and ran outside to find their garage and vehicle ablaze.

As the couple watched the flames devour their belongings, Carol learned the community centre — also owned by the society — was burning too.

Jay Bradley, who ran a rollerskating business at the centre before his business failed, was arrested 12 days later. He pleaded guilty in July to two counts of arson and one count of criminal harassment.

On Friday, Bradley sat next to his lawyer as 10 victim impact statements were read out in court. 

They described the fear, pain and sense of loss stemming from the fires and the destruction of a community centre that housed Napanee's old arena and was referred to affectionately by some as "the Old Girl."

Three firefighters in full gear stand in front of a white and green brick building that's partially collapsed. Smoke is in the air and rubble is one the ground.
Firefighters put out the community arena blaze. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

'An act of malice'

The courtroom heard from representatives of a pickleball group who used the centre and from members of the Sea Cadets who lost uniforms and equipment, among others. 

Max Kaiser spoke on behalf of the agricultural society board, describing what happened as "an act of malice that was both grand and profoundly public."

When society members learned the McKinleys had also been targeted, their nights were full of fear, wondering whether they'd be the next victim for simply volunteering to help the community, Kaiser told the court.

"The sheer thought that someone could be so careless, risking the safety of our entire community for a fleeting moment of chaos, was chilling," said Kaiser.

Members of McKinley's family also shared their experiences. 

McKinley's daughter Mikayla MacDonald said while their home had been a safe place, that sense of security was destroyed by the fire.

A tall man with white hair and a moustache stands next to a small woman in a white vest and orange sweater. Behind them is a burned down garage and a vehicle with scorch marks on it.
Carole McKinley and her husband George stand in front of the ruins of their garage. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

The family's garage included a hand-made bench, a heirloom clock and a decade's worth of business files — all lost.

McKinley's husband George said Bradley's "little temper tantrum has hurt a lot of people."

'I take full ownership'

Bradley finally addressed the court himself, speaking through tears in a rambling speech he said wasn't pre-written but made "from the heart."

He acknowledged the fires could have been worse, adding, "It is selfish. I take full ownership."

But he said believes his actions weren't "necessarily revenge."

Asked by the judge what led him to set the fires, Bradley referred to his past success in the IT industry and the depression he fell into after he lost his job.

"For somebody that was an underdog….to get where I was by hard work, I couldn't let it go," he said. "Carol McKinley was a symbol."

Court hears from Napanee arson victims at sentencing hearing

26 days ago
Duration 1:58
Jay Nelson Bradley has pleaded guilty to two counts of arson and criminal harassment. Today a judge at the Napanee, Ont. courthouse heard from victims. The CBC's Dan Taekema reports.

Bradley's lawyer, Jason Dickson, argued his client should spend two more years behind bars, while assistant Crown attorney Kerry Watson recommended five years, less time served.

Watson also asked that a 1953 Pontiac sedan, used by Bradley on the night of the fires, be auctioned off so the funds could go toward victims of the fires.

Dickson said Bradley felt that was an "excellent idea."

First-time offender

Bradley is 50 and this was his first offence, as both Dickson and Justice Geoffrey Griffin noted. 

"That is the mystery, J. Bradley," Griffin said. 

Griffin described the arena as a "hockey palace" and an "almost sacred" space in Napanee, pointing out that the Detroit Red Wings once played there.

Two firefighters in full gear, including helmets, haul a hose into a green and white cinder-block building. There's smoke coming out the door and a large, white roller skate can be seen painted on the wall beside them.
The arena was considered an almost sacred space, the courtroom heard during Bradley's sentencing hearing on Friday. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

"It was built by the community. It was used by the community. It was a testament to the community," Griffin said. "You're the man that destroyed that. For this community, that is seen as a terrible, terrible, evil act that is inexplicable and you'll be wearing that forever."

Bradley is expected to be sentenced on Nov. 8.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Dan Taekema

Reporter

Dan Taekema is CBC’s reporter covering Kingston, Ont. and the surrounding area. He’s worked in newsrooms in Chatham, Windsor, Hamilton, Toronto and Ottawa. You can reach him by emailing daniel.taekema@cbc.ca.