As Al Sharpton ran for mayor of New York City in 1997 and for president in 2003, fires at his offices reportedly destroyed critical financial records, and he subsequently failed to comply with tax and campaign filing requirements.
The first fire began in the early hours of April 10, 1997, in a hair-and-nail salon one floor below Sharptons campaign headquarters at 70 West 125th Street. From the start, investigators deemed the fire suspicious because of a heavy volume of fire on arrival and because many of the doors remained unlocked after hours, according to the New York Fire Departments fire-and-incident report
Six years later, on January 23, 2003 one day after Sharpton filed paperwork to create a presidential exploratory committee another fire caused heavy damage at National Action Network, located at 1941 Madison Avenue. (The Federal Election Commission (FEC) later determined that Sharpton had actually become a candidate no later than October 2002, although, contrary to law, he had not filed his statement of candidacy until April 2003.)
The battalion chief who responded to the fire initially coded it as suspicious. On the fire-and-incident report, the cause of fire is designated as NFA [Not Fully Ascertained] Heat from electrical equipment (Extension Cords). But by the evening of January 24, the chief fire marshal told the New York Times that both an eyewitness account and a physical examination by fire marshals point to the cause as accidental.