After setting fire to the Pearl Laundry Center, Charles James Perrin returned to the scene to ‘admire his work,’ according to the police in IN
- Charles James Perrin has been sentenced to almost a decade behind bars for setting fire to a historic building in downtown Evansville, Indiana.
- Indiana’s century-old Pearl Laundry Center, which was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1984, was slated for restoration before it was set on fire.
- According to the police, the arson was an act of "self-gratification," where Perrin returned to the scene to "admire his work."
A southwestern Indiana man was sentenced to nine years in prison after pleading guilty to setting a fire that gutted a historic century-old building which had been slated for restoration.
A Vanderburgh County judge sentenced Charles James Perrin, 25, on Tuesday after the Evansville man pleaded guilty to felony charges of arson and criminal mischief in the May fire that left the Pearl Laundry Center building in ruins, the Evansville Courier & Press reported.
Perrin was arrested on May 18 and accused of setting fire the previous day to the downtown Evansville building, which was once known as "Pearl Steam Laundry."
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Charles James Perrin received nine years behind bars for setting Indiana’s Pearl Laundry Center on fire. (Fox News)
Investigators described the fire as a criminal act of "self gratification." Police said Perrin told officers that after setting the fire he returned to the scene to "admire his work."
The Pearl Laundry Center was built in 1912 and was added in 1984 to the National Register of Historic Places.
The laundry business closed in 2018 but prior to the fire Pearl Development LLC had hoped to revamp the historic brick building into a commercial space in Evansville, an Ohio River city about 170 miles southwest of Indianapolis.