THE HOUSE OF NO ESCAPE: Inside the “Death Trap” That Claimed Three Innocent Lives

KENOSHA, WI — In the world of crime reporting, we often see tragedies born of a split-second mistake. But as the case against Joshua P. Kannin unfolds in a Kenosha County courtroom this April, a far more sinister picture is emerging. It wasn’t just a fire that killed Rylee (10), Connor (9), and Alena (7) on Thanksgiving night. It was a series of calculated, cold-blooded choices that turned a family home into a funeral pyre.

The “Annoyance” of Survival

The criminal complaint filed on April 21, 2026, reveals a detail that has left veteran investigators shaken. Kannin, 39, admitted to police that he had intentionally disabled the smoke detectors in the apartment. His reason? He claimed the chirping sounds were an “annoyance.”

By silencing the alarms, Kannin effectively blinded his children to the danger creeping through the kitchen while they slept. Forensics now suggest the fire ignited on the stove—possibly as the hungry children tried to cook a meal for themselves while their father slept.

Nailed Shut: The Final Betrayal

Perhaps the most damning evidence presented by prosecutors involves the windows. In a twisted attempt at “home security,” Kannin had nailed wooden boards across the windows.

“It wasn’t a home; it was a cage,” says a source close to the investigation. “When the smoke filled the hallway, those children had one exit—and it was blocked by their father’s own hand.”

While Kannin was captured on police bodycam footage in his underwear, screaming that his children were inside, witnesses describe a different story. Reports indicate a 10-minute gap between the first signs of smoke and Kannin’s frantic “performance” for the officers.

A Mother’s Warning Ignored

The children’s mother, who described the living conditions as “filthy” and “dangerous,” had previously warned that the kids were forced to “fend for themselves.” Her testimony paints a picture of a household where neglect was the status quo long before the first spark flew.

As Kannin prepares for his first court appearance on May 14, 2026, he faces up to 75 years in prison. But for the community of Kenosha, no sentence will ever answer the burning question: Why did a father save himself and leave his children behind in a labyrinth he created?


THE INVESTIGATION CONTINUES

Our team has obtained exclusive access to the digital forensic report of Kannin’s phone activity during the “10-minute gap.” The results are beyond disturbing.

Was he really asleep, or was he watching the clock?

Wisconsin dad Joshua Kannin charged after allegedly leaving his 3 kids to die inside burning apartment while he saved himself

A Wisconsin dad is accused of leaving his three kids to die in a Thanksgiving house fire while he rushed outside because he “panicked.”

Joshua Kannin, 39, was charged Tuesday with child neglect over the deaths of Rylee, 10; Connor, 9; and 7-year-old Alena following the blaze at his Kenosha home on Nov. 27 — with the kids’ mom saying she’s living her “worst nightmare,” TMJ4 reported.

Kenosha police swooped on Kannin’s home after receiving calls that the home was “fully engulfed,” according to a criminal complaint.

He was in his underwear when he charged over to the police, begging for help.

Connor, Rylee, and Alena Kanni smiling for a picture.
Joshua Kannin’s kids Connor, Rylee, and Alena died following a house fire during Thanksgiving.Gofundme

Alena was found on the second floor, while Connor and Rylee were on the first floor.

The brothers were pronounced dead, while Alena was hospitalized with burns covering 80% of her body – before she later died.

Kannin, who was hospitalized, admitted to having a cigarette before bed and was woken up during the night. But he wasn’t  sure if it was because of his “cat making noise or due to the smoke.”

He then saw a “little fire on the kitchen floor” before he “panicked and walked out the front door.”

“At that moment, he thought to himself ‘I have to get help,’” cops said.

Kannin urged his kids to leave his burning home – and told police he tried to go back inside, “but smoke just came at me and I couldn’t see.”

The home with fire damage around a window and front door on the right, with police and caution tape present.Gofundme

“I barely got two steps in and I had to turn back around,” he told police. “When I opened the door, I made it worse.”

Fire officials searched his home and realized there were no smoke detectors.

Kannin said he had taken down one alarm because it “started to malfunction or make sounds.” He claimed the alarm would “randomly go off” and described the noise as an “annoyance.”

Emergency services are pictured outside the home.Gofundme

Jourdan Feasby, the kids’ mom, said she had warned her ex about the lack of alarms.

“I was on him about not having the smoke detectors, I let his mother know who cleaned his house once a week that there were no smoke detectors, I let the landlord know there were no smoke detectors,” she told CBS58.

Feasby described her ex’s apartment as “disgusting” and said it was “fend for yourself in a sense.”

She described his charges as “bittersweet” and said she’s “just a shell” — nearly five months after the fire.

“I died with them that day,” she said.

“It’s just been pure hell for myself and my family. I’m literally living my worst nightmare.”

The kids’ deaths were ruled as accidental — but Feasby says she’s fighting for justice, saying there needs to be “serious repercussions.”

Kannin is due to appear in court on May 14.