A landlord has been jailed for two-and-a-half years after a fire in one of his properties left a teenage tenant so badly burnt she was given less than 1% chance of survival.
Only pioneering skin grafting techniques saved Layla Skalli’s life after she suffered 80% deep tissue burns all over her body following the blaze at her Norwich flat.
Virtually all the skin below her neck was destroyed by the intense 600 degree heat as the property above a mobile phone shop became a raging inferno last year with tenants in three adjoining properties lucky to escape the blaze.
Fire crews rescued a woman living in a second floor apartment above Miss Skalli’s flat as she prepared to jump for her life. Other tenants climbed down a drain pipe to escape.
Landlord Michael Billings admitted 13 charges of failing to comply with fire safety regulations and not maintaining gas appliances at Norwich Crown Court.
The court heard Billings failed to provide even the most basic protection for his tenants, such as fitting a working fire alarm system, installing the correct number of fire doors or even providing adequate means of escape. The gas appliances in the flats above the shop had not been serviced or properly inspected.
Judge Paul Downes sentenced Mr Billings, of Ashman’s Hall, Barsham, Beccles, Suffolk, to two-and-a-half year’s imprisonment and ordered him to pay £20,000 in costs. Judge Downes said he would review the sentence if Mr Billings pays Miss Skalli £20,000 as a show of remorse. The judge also ordered a £400 award be paid out of the public purse to Dominic Gale, a passer-by who raised the alarm after spotting the fire.
Miss Skalli, now aged 20, was living in a flat above shops in Magdalen Street, Norwich, when fire broke out in the early hours of April 14, 2009. The court heard that temperatures in the flat quickly soared and her screams could be heard by distressed neighbours.
The terrified teenager was unable to escape because her sash window could only be opened by four inches and the staircase was blocked by thick black smoke.
Firefighters used their ladder as a battering ram to smash the window and climb inside where they found Miss Skalli lying unconscious on the floor with her hands covering her face, the only part of her not burnt by the intense heat.
The firefighter who carried Miss Skalli down the ladder described her body as being so hot his arms were beginning to burn through his tunic.
The cause of the blaze has never been conclusively found.