Crime & Safety

Daughter's Roommate Charged In Arson Death Of Bucks Co. 81-Year-Old: DA

The older man was unable to use his home's chairlift to get downstairs and escape during the blaze, which appeared intentionally set.

(Christopher George Gillie of Lackawanna County was arrested Sunday after being connected to a house fire in Doylestown. )

DOYLESTOWN, PA — A 61-year-old man has been charged with criminal homicide, among other charges, in the death of a Doylestown man in a house fire early Sunday morning.

Christopher G. Gillie of Scranton is being held without bail after an investigation connected him to a fire on 5777 Private Drive, which broke out just after 3 a.m. Sunday.

He has also been charged with attempted criminal homicide, theft by unlawful taking, aggravated arson, criminal mischief, aggravated assault, recklessly endangering another person, persons not to possess firearms, two counts each of burglary and criminal trespassing and three counts of arson endangering persons.

Find out what's happening in Newtownfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Multiple neighbors called about the fire according to the Buckingham Township Police Department, saying they could hear screaming from inside the home and were concerned people might be trapped inside.

Julius and Phyllis Drelick, the elderly couple living there, were. Both have limited walking ability, and use a chairlift to go up and down their stairs.

Find out what's happening in Newtownfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Phyllis, who was able to escape from the home, said she heard someone open their door and saw lights from a car entering and later leaving their driveway in the night, according to a criminal complaint. She then smelled smoke and heard their smoke detector going off.

Phyllis used the chairlift to get midway down the stairs before the lights, chairlift, and other electric systems in the house all turned off due to the blaze. She got the rest of the way downstairs to open the door as the house was filling with smoke and urged her husband to follow, saying she would come up and help him. He said he didn't think he'd be able to and then stopped answering her; that's when she went to a neighbor's house to get help.

Fighting the fire proved difficult despite multiple fire departments on the scene, due to high heat and intense flames already engulfing the home. Firefighters were unable to safely remain in the building, and required many thousands of gallons of water to eventually tamp down the fire.

Firefighters found 81-year-old Julius Drelick dead in the home. He had died from smoke and soot inhalation as well as thermal burns, according to the Bucks County Coroner's Office.

Miraculously, Phyllis did not suffer any injuries.

Firefighters got the blaze under control after around two hours, and called investigators to the scene to examine the fire's cause.

District Attorney Matthew Weintraub said investigators found five or six points of origin for the fire, including at the entrance and exit of the home. As part of the investigation, an accelerant detection K9 dog was brought to the scene, and detected an accelerant in three areas of the home's family room.

Surveillance footage from a neighbor's home showed a light-colored sports utility vehicle traveling up the Drelicks' driveway at approximately 2:04 a.m., and driving away from the home at 2:53 a.m., according to a criminal complaint.

Coors Light beer cans were found on the back porch and on the roadway. Phyllis said she did not have that type of beer in their home.

Further investigation by the DA's office and Buckingham detectives led to Gillie, who resides with the Drelicks' daughter in Dunmore, Lackawanna County. Hours after the fire, he was stopped in Lackawanna County nearly two hours away by Dunmore Police. He was driving a Buick Encore, which belonged to the Drelicks' daughter and which he apparently took without her permission. She had reported the car missing, leading police to pull Gillie over.

A strong odor of gasoline was emanating from Gillie, and a lighter was visible on the passenger's seat, according to police. He also admitted that he had been drinking, and had been seen drinking Coors Light previously, according to Weintraub.

He was then found to have the house keys to 5777 Private Drive in his pocket.

Furthermore, an older-style rifle was sitting in plain view on the rear seat of the car. Phyllis identified the rifle as belonging to her and her husband, and as normally hanging above the mantel in their family room.

“I can’t stop thinking about that chairlift frozen in place by the fire in the middle of the stairs," Weintraub said, adding, “I cannot imagine the terror that they both must have felt as they were separated by the fire. Now, forever.”

In a news conference, Weintraub said the Drelicks' daughter has been cooperating with the investigation. He said there was no indication that she had knowledge of what would transpire. Gillie had also previously been at the Drelicks' home under legal, "friendly" terms, according to Weintraub.

Gillie had a prior arson conviction in 2013, according to court records. He is being held at Bucks County Correctional Facility without bail. According to Weintraub, the DA's office has some ideas about motive which are still being developed, but which he did not yet want to speak to.

This case was investigated by Detectives with the Bucks County District Attorney’s Office and the Buckingham Township Police Department. Assistance was provided by the Bucks County Fire Marshal, the Buckingham Township Fire Marshal, the Bristol Township Fire Marshal, the Bensalem Township Fire Marshal, the Philadelphia Fire Marshal, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Dunmore Police Department, the Solebury Township Police Department, the Midway Fire Company, and the Bucks County Coroner's Office.

Editor's note: A prior version of this story reported that the man's body was recovered after two hours of fighting the fire. This was inaccurate; the man's body was recovered shortly after arrival, according to Hugh Hager of the Midway Volunteer Fire Company. Patch regrets the error.


Get more important stories in your community straight to your inbox when you subscribe to Patch.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.