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Home»Art Market
Art Market

LA Fire Suspect Identified by ‘Dystopian Painting’ Image Created with ChatGPT

News RoomBy News RoomOctober 9, 2025
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The arrest of a man suspected of starting the tragic Pacific Palisades fire in January was aided by the discovery of a ChatGPT image created to envision a “dystopian painting” of people fleeing a fire amid a power struggle between the rich and the poor.

Jonathan Rinderknecht, whose arrest was announced on Wednesday, allegedly started a smaller fire on New Year’s Day that may have reignited on January 7 after remaining embers were stirred up by high winds. Authorities found links to the fire on Rinderknecht’s phone, according to a report by the BBC. The suspect queried ChatGPT about culpability related to starting a fire with cigarettes, in a move characterized by investigators as an attempt to “preserve evidence of himself trying to assist in the suppression of the fire.”

In July 2024, Rinderknecht also reportedly asked ChatGPT to create a “dystopian painting” of a blaze in which “hundreds of thousands of people in poverty are trying to get past a gigantic gate with a big dollar sign on it. On the other side of the gate and the entire wall is a conglomerate of the richest people. They are chilling, watching the world burn down, and watching the people struggle. They are laughing, enjoying themselves, and dancing.”

Rinderknecht has been charged with destruction of property by means of fire, with the possibility of additional charges including murder, after the tragedy in which 12 people died and more than 6,000 homes were destroyed. The grounds of the Getty Villa museum caught fire as a result of the blaze, leading to four months of closure before the institution reopened in May. And the tragedy raised wrenching questions for residents of Pacific Palisades—including art collector Ron Rivlin, who lost his home and 340 artworks by artists including Andy Warhol, Keith Haring, John Baldessari, Damien Hirst, Alex Katz, Kenny Scharf, and others.

“It just exploded, and the flame from the house next door came in through a wind tunnel in our house,” Rivlin told ARTnews after that disastrous day. “Our neighbor’s house was engulfed in flames, and that’s when we knew our house was burning down.”

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