New Jersey man charged with starting massive, half-contained wildfire in Ocean County
Published in News & Features
A New Jersey man was arrested in connection with sparking the 15,100-acre fire that has burned for three days straight in Ocean County, just miles from the Jersey Shore.
Joseph Kling, 19, of Waretown, has been charged with arson and aggravated arson, Ocean County Prosecutor Bradley D. Billhimer and New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection Commissioner Shawn M. LaTourette said in a joint statement posted to Facebook Thursday morning.
The blaze — which was 50% contained as of Thursday afternoon — could become New Jersey’s largest since 2007, when a 17,000-acre wildfire burned in the same general area, LaTourette told reporters at a Wednesday night news conference.
The fire started at around 9:45 a.m. Tuesday, when the Cedar Bridge Fire Tower spotted plumes of smoke in Ocean Township near Jones Road and Bryant Road. Upon arrival, the statement said, emergency crews observed a fire inside the Ocean County Natural Lands Trust’s Forked River Mountains Wilderness Area, a preserve known for birding and biking.
Since then, the fire has snaked through the Greenwood Forest Wildlife Management Area to the wilderness of the Pinelands, sparking Acting Gov. Tahesha Way to declare a state of emergency. More than 5,000 people in neighboring Lacey and Ocean townships were also ordered to evacuate Tuesday night, but have since returned home.
No injuries have been reported. Several vehicles and one commercial building had been destroyed by the flames as of Thursday afternoon, when smoke wafted north to trigger air quality warnings for Atlantic City and the New York City metropolitan area. Officials advised people with heart or lung conditions in those areas to limit outdoor activities.
Kling allegedly set several wooden pallets on fire Tuesday morning, the statement said, and then left them there to burn unattended.
The fire was started on an undisclosed person’s property with the “purpose of destroying or damaging any forest,” according to a police affidavit obtained by The Inquirer.
Kling was taken into police custody Wednesday, according to the statement. During a brief Zoom court appearance before Ocean County Judge James Gluck Thursday, Kling looked solemn, staring at the floor or nervously fidgeting with his hair. Gluck ruled that Kling will be detained at the Ocean County Jail until a detention hearing scheduled for April 29.
Kling was previously arrested in January on charges of misdemeanor assault and endangering an injured person alongside six other men and one teenager in connection with a fight that occurred near the site of Lacey Materials. A separate hearing for this case is scheduled for May 12.
“This is the worst fire in the history of our township,” Peter Curatolo, mayor of the impacted Lacey Township, previously told The Inquirer. “I know our residents were terrified.”
On the tree-lined street in Waretown where Kling’s family resides, ashes floated across the gravel and stone front yards, smudging black on the front steps. Kling’s family did not answer when a reporter knocked on the door of their one-story home on Letts Landing Road.
High temps and steady winds fan the flames
The wildfire threatens eight unspecified structures as of Thursday afternoon, according to an X post from the New Jersey Forest Fire Service, but roads have begun to reopen.
Wells Mill Road in Waretown had reopened just before 5 a.m. Thursday, while the heavily used Garden State Parkway and Route 9 reopened Wednesday night.
Experts, however, say the fire still could spread further.
During Wednesday night’s news conference, LaTourette said that the blaze’s growth was “influenced” by drought conditions from last summer that have lingered into peak wildfire season. The weather is favorable for fires: Low humidity, high temperatures and steady winds.
Thursday is especially bad for fire containment efforts, according to Ray Martin, a lead meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Mount Holly. Temperatures could hit 80 degrees as wind speeds hover between 35 and 45 mph.
“We do expect additional spread today, but no raging infernos,” said Martin. “It’s not likely the fire would break the containment” area.
About 1,320 buildings were threatened when the fire broke out Tuesday. That number had dropped to 20 by Wednesday night. LaTourette said he was “hopeful” that the fire would remain away from people, “but I’m not going to tell you there’s no chance because wildfires are risky.”
“There’s a lot of work to do,” LaTourette told reporters. “We’ve truly averted a major disaster.”
While humidity will tick up Friday, Martin said that Saturday’s forecast showers could put a “real dent” in the fire even if they don’t necessarily extinguish it.
“It probably needs a really good soaking to really shut it down, and we’re not sure we’re going to get that Saturday,” said Martin. “It could smolder for weeks.”
New Jersey has had a busy wildfire season, charting 662 fires and over 16,500 acres burned. That’s 52 times more acreage burned than in 2024, New Jersey Forest Fire Service chief Bill Donnelly said, when 310 wildfires caused 315 acres' worth of damage this time last year.
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(Staff writers Ryan Briggs and Tony Wood contributed to this article.)
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©2025The Philadelphia Inquirer, LLC. Visit at inquirer.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
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