Former Utah school bus driver accused of setting fire to buses, including one with children on board: DOJ

A seasoned, now former school bus driver in Utah faces federal and state arson charges after allegedly lighting his school bus on fire with dozens of children on board.

According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Utah, Michael Austin Ford, 58, of West Valley City was indicted by a grand jury in February, and was detained on Friday, after authorities accused him of setting a school bus on fire on two separate occasions.

Police said Ford, who was a Granite School District bus driver for 25 years, allegedly started the fire with an "incendiary source."

Authorities said in one incident, at least 42 children were on board the bus when Ford allegedly started the blaze and kept driving.

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Ford allegedly used an ignition device to start the fire and continued to drive the bus while smoke billowed to where the dozens of children sat in the back.

"Undeterred by the smoke, the Defendant only stops the bus when children are seen and heard on video coughing, covering their faces, and complaining about smoke," prosecutors said in court documents.

Officials said that the incident was captured on video.

Over a year later, in April 2023, Ford was again driving a Granite School District bus in traffic when he allegedly ignited a fire on the bus. 

Again, Ford continued to drive the bus with smoke billowing past his face.

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Prosecutors said Ford attempted to tamper with the bus surveillance system in the days before the second fire.

Days later, Ford was arrested by Granite School Police and questioned about the fire but was released, according to the prosecutor’s office.

Ford was arrested again on felony state charges in October 2023, according to a Utah docket report

Ford was charged with two counts of arson of a vehicle of an organization receiving federal funds, prosecutors said.

Ford has been ordered detained ahead of his federal trial, set for April 29, in Salt Lake City.

Authorities did not disclose a motive behind the incidents.

The Granite School District and the prosecutor's office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment. 

Recall campaign accuses Dem of 'legacy of failure' following sweeping crime bill vote

The Washington, D.C., City Council's vote to pass a sweeping public safety bill can't change one member's "legacy of failure" or restore lives lost in the District's surging crime crisis, a campaign to recall the Democrat told Fox News.

All but one councilmember on Tuesday voted in favor of the Secure D.C. Omnibus Amendment Act, which includes a swath of measures aimed at curbing surging crime, amid outcries from fed-up business owners and residents. The urgent response comes as two Democrats who voted in favor of the bill, Councilmembers Brianne Nadeau and Charles Allen, face recall efforts over their criminal justice reform positions.

"The vote on Secure DC is only necessary due to the reckless, pro-criminal and anti-police policies Councilmember Nadeau has championed over her last decade in office," the Committee to Recall Brianne Nadeau said in a statement. "Sadly, nothing in this bill can restore the lives and livelihoods that have been lost over these past years of unimaginable crime levels."

The sweeping legislation contains over 100 measures, including harsher penalties for gun crimes and retail theft, an expanded definition of carjacking and revives drug-free zones. Nadeau boasted that the Secure DC act included her amendment, a study that would evaluate the District's witness assistance programs and offer recommendations.

DEMS JOIN HEAVILY-FUNDED EFFORT TO OUST FELLOW DEM IN CRIME-RIDDEN CITY

"Giving testimony in a murder case comes with significant risks and costs – a reason that so many people decline to testify, and why we need to support witnesses who come forward," Nadeau said in a statement. "Information provided by witnesses is highly valuable to law enforcement as they work to solve homicide cases, and we need to close more homicide cases."

But the recall campaign accused the council and the three-term Democrat of taking action too late. It also criticized an amendment that raised the amount for retail theft to be considered a felony from $500 to $1,000, arguing that the higher threshold would make it harder to hold thieves accountable.

"The District is in the midst of a nationally recognized crime crisis," the Nadeau recall campaign statement said. "We've been repeatedly ignored and dismissed by Brianne Nadeau for years despite our pleas for help."

"It is only now that her job is on the line that she is trying to give the appearance of corrective action," the campaign continued. "A vote at the eleventh hour does not change her legacy of failure and decline in our community." 

SURGING CRIME, COSTS FORCED 52 BUSINESSES TO SHUTTER IN THIS BLUE CITY LAST YEAR. ANOTHER IS ABOUT TO CLOSE

The nation's capital ended 2023 with 274 murders — the most in over two decades – while overall violent crime spiked 39% from the year prior, according to Metropolitan Police Department data. Robberies and thefts in the District spiked 67% and 23%, respectively, and motor vehicle thefts almost doubled.

Nadeau did not respond to a request for comment. In February, she said crime concerns are "rational and understandable," called public safety her "top priority" and pointed to three bills she's spearheading to address the issue, including legislation aimed at improving the city's 911 center and police cadet recruitment, The Washington Post reported

5 MONTHS. 5 BURGLARIES. ANOTHER RESTAURANT SHUTTERS AS CRIME PUSHES BUSINESSES TO BRINK IN BLUE CITY

The recall campaign has argued that Nadeau's support of progressive legislation enabled criminals. The councilmember has voted in favor of slashing $15 million from the police budget in 2020 and supported an overhaul to the city's criminal code in 2022, which would have lowered the maximum penalties for certain offenses like burglaries and carjackings if Congress hadn't blocked the legislation. 

"The historic rise in crime is not just mere numbers; they represent shattered lives, eroded trust, and a community living in fear," the recall effort's chairwoman, Diana Alvarez, said in February. "Brianne Nadeau has fundamentally failed to take any consequential action to reduce crime, and it is time she is held accountable."

The Lit City Smoke Shop owner previously told Fox News that Nadeau failed to protect residents and business owners. Alvarez said she was pushed to launch the recall campaign after her store was burglarized four times in 2023, leading to costly damage and employee distress. 

"It's been very, very challenging," Alvarez said. "The crime in D.C. has just gotten way out of control, and it's affecting small businesses like mine."

"It's embarrassing," she continued. "We are the nation's capital. This should not be happening here."

The bill is headed to Mayor Muriel Bowser's desk. 

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