Minnesota Wild reporter Jessi Pierce and her three children found dead in house fire, NHL says
Cause of the fire that killed Pierce, who had covered the Minnesota hockey team for a decade, is under investigation
Associated Press
Mon 23 Mar 2026 00.04 GMT
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NHL reporter Jessi Pierce and her three children were killed on Saturday in a weekend house fire in Minnesota, the league announced on its sports website Sunday.
Pierce, 37, covered the Minnesota Wild as the correspondent for NHL.com for the past decade.
“The entire NHL.com team is devastated and heartbroken by the loss of Jessi and her children,” said Bill Price, vice-president and editor-in-chief of NHL.com, in a statement.
“Jessi’s love of her family and hockey was evident in the energy and passion she brought to her work for us. She was an absolute joy to talk to and work with. She will be deeply missed.”
Firefighters responded to a house fire on Saturday morning in White Bear Lake, Minnesota. Neighbors called 911 and reported seeing flames coming through the roof.
Fire crews located an adult, three children and a dog inside the house and all were deceased, the White Bear Lake fire department said. The department did not release the names of the victims in its statement on Saturday.
The cause of the fire is under investigation.
“Out hearts ache for those involved in this tragedy. We ask for the opportunity to allow our community to come together and support one another during this difficult time,” the White Bear Lake fire chief, Greg Peterson, said in the statement.
The Minnesota Wild mourned her loss on social media on Sunday.
“Jessi was a kind, compassionate person that cared deeply about her family and those around her. She served as an ambassador for the game of hockey during her time covering the Wild and the NHL,” the social media post said.
Minnesota is known as the “State of Hockey”, and the Wild have had one of the biggest fanbases since their inception in 2000. The North Stars had moved to Dallas to become the Stars in the early 1990s.
A haunting new scene observation is now circulating widely in the wake of the White Bear Lake house fire that claimed the lives of NHL reporter Jessi Pierce and her three young children on March 21, 2026. According to details shared in unverified posts and whispered accounts gaining traction online, one of the first firefighters to enter the smoke-filled home noticed a bedroom door slightly ajar — cracked open by roughly 15 centimeters — amid the thick, choking smoke. What he reportedly glimpsed behind that door caused him to pause for a few critical seconds before pushing forward in the rescue effort.
This latest “scene observation” has ignited fresh waves of emotion and speculation across social media platforms, hockey mourning groups, and local Minnesota community chats. One viral Facebook post that has been shared thousands of times reads: “Firefighter saw the bedroom door ajar just 15cm through the smoke… but what was behind it made him pause. This detail is breaking hearts all over again.” Comments flooded in immediately: “He probably saw one of the kids or Jessi trying to get out… those few seconds must haunt him.” Another user connected it to the growing timeline: “Right after the blurry hallway movement on the doorbell cam at 5:23 a.m., the lights changing, the unsent six-word draft on her phone at 5:19 a.m. — now this cracked bedroom door. The final moments feel so real and so terrifying.”
The tragedy unfolded in the family’s single-family home on the 2100 block of Richard Avenue in White Bear Lake, Minnesota. Neighbors called 911 after seeing flames coming through the roof shortly after 5:25–5:30 a.m. When firefighters arrived, the structure was already fully involved. Inside the dense smoke, responders tragically located Jessi Pierce, 37, her sons Hudson (8) and Cayden (6), daughter Avery (4), and the family dog — all deceased, with smoke inhalation cited as the primary cause. Jessi’s husband, Mike Hinrichs, was out of town and absent from the scene when crews arrived, a timeline detail that has drawn its own attention in recent reports.
Online discussions are now frantically stitching this bedroom door observation into the broader mosaic of circulating rumors. People imagine the scene in those desperate early-morning minutes: Jessi, possibly awakened by her husband’s reported 3-word text or the strange message she received days earlier, moving through the hallway where the doorbell camera allegedly captured blurry movement and shifting lights at 5:23 a.m. Perhaps she cracked open the children’s bedroom door to check on them or to guide them out — leaving it 15cm ajar — before smoke overwhelmed the house. The firefighter’s brief pause, according to the whispers, came from the emotional weight of spotting small figures or movement in the low-visibility conditions, only to realize the severity of the situation too late.

The phone left untouched on the kitchen counter with its gray-smoke-covered screen and unsent six-word draft at 5:19 a.m., the stove switch allegedly found on a low setting despite Jessi’s reputation as an “extremely careful mother” who always double-checked appliances before bed — all of these elements now feel even more poignant when paired with the slightly open bedroom door. “She was trying to get to her kids,” one emotional Reddit-style thread speculated. “That 15cm crack might have been her last act of protection, and the firefighter seeing whatever was behind it… no one should have to experience that.”
Official updates from the White Bear Lake Fire Department and the Minnesota State Fire Marshal’s Office have remained focused and measured. Preliminary findings released in recent days have ruled out arson, stating there is no evidence the fire was set intentionally. The exact cause remains under active investigation, with priorities placed on supporting affected families and allowing first responders time to heal. No public statements have confirmed the specific firefighter observation about the bedroom door, the 15cm measurement, or any pause inside the home. Mainstream coverage continues to emphasize the profound loss rather than unverified scene details.
Jessi Pierce was a beloved fixture in the “State of Hockey.” As a dedicated NHL.com reporter covering the Minnesota Wild, co-host of the Bardown Beauties podcast, and a warm, energetic presence in press boxes, she brought passion, insight, and kindness to her work. Colleagues and friends remember her as the ultimate multitasker — sharp journalist by night, fiercely devoted mom by day who created a safe, loving home for Hudson, Cayden, and Avery. She was known for her meticulous safety habits, her infectious laugh, and the way she lit up every room. The Minnesota Wild, the NHL, players, and fans have poured out tributes, calling her a joy and a bright light whose absence leaves a massive void.
The reported bedroom door detail has struck such a deep chord because it humanizes the unimaginable terror of those final seconds. In thick smoke, visibility drops to near zero; every movement becomes a struggle. A door left slightly ajar — 15cm — could represent a mother’s instinct to protect her sleeping children, a desperate attempt to create an escape path, or simply the chaos of a household suddenly overtaken by invisible lethal smoke. The firefighter’s pause, however brief, speaks to the human element of first response: the split-second emotional reaction amid training and urgency.
As investigators continue examining all evidence — including recovered phone data for anomalies, call records, the reported strange pre-fire text, the husband’s 3-word message, doorbell footage, and physical scene observations — the online narrative keeps evolving in kitchens, group chats, and hockey forums across Minnesota and beyond. A GoFundMe supporting Mike Hinrichs has seen overwhelming community support for funeral costs and recovery. Memorials with flowers, stuffed animals, hockey memorabilia, and handwritten notes continue to grow outside the charred home, turning a quiet suburban street into a place of shared sorrow.
Skeptics remind everyone that many vivid details spreading online originate from anonymous accounts or chain messages that can shift with each retelling. What feels like a dramatic revelation today may be clarified or contextualized as the full investigation concludes. Yet the collective instinct to piece together every fragment — the stove, the phone, the hallway lights, the texts, and now this cracked bedroom door — reflects a very human desire to find meaning, closure, or at least understanding in a tragedy that feels senseless.
Smoke inhalation remains the silent, deadly force in most residential fires, often incapacitating people long before flames become visible — which aligns with how quickly the home became fully involved despite sounding alarms. Broader conversations sparked by this loss have turned toward fire safety reminders: working detectors, escape plans, and the importance of checking appliances, even for the most careful parents like Jessi.
Whatever the firefighter truly saw behind that slightly ajar door in those smoke-filled seconds — and whatever official reports ultimately determine about the fire’s origin — the outcome is heartbreakingly final. Four vibrant lives — a passionate journalist, a devoted mother, and three innocent children full of joy — were taken far too soon. Jessi’s legacy endures in every tribute, every shared memory of her warmth and energy, and in the way the hockey community has rallied together.
The whispers about the bedroom door, the 15cm gap, and the pause will likely continue circulating as part of the evolving timeline until more concrete answers emerge. But amid all the speculation and rumor, one truth stands clear from every post and comment: Jessi was the careful, loving heart of her home, doing everything she could for her babies in those final moments. Her light — though extinguished amid thick smoke and flames — continues to shine through the outpouring of love, support, and remembrance from those she touched so deeply.
In the end, these fragmented clues serve as a painful reminder of life’s fragility and the bravery of first responders who run toward danger while the rest of us can only watch and mourn from afar.
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