Fire set to Pulse nightclub memorial banners was not a hate crime, investigators say

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ORLANDO, Fla. — Investigators with the Orlando Fire Department said a fire set to the Pulse memorial was not a hate crime.

Three banners honoring victims on the other side of the wall were burned, but have since been fixed.

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It is still unclear why the fire was set to the memorial.

A man was arrested in connection with the arson at the Pulse nightclub memorial.

READ: Suspect in Pulse memorial wall arson arrested

Mark Henson is expected to make his first appearance in court on Wednesday.

A video showed the moment a man in a wheelchair rolled up to the banners and lit them on fire. It happened last month.

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Henson was arrested just days after the video was released to the community.

WATCH: Man caught on camera setting fire to Pulse memorial wall

A Pulse survivor said the intentional fire was downright disrespectful.

“This is a space where late at night when no one else is here I come when I want to feel close to them again,” Brandon Wolf said. “And the idea that someone could desecrate a space like that, do something so violent, and so hateful, it’s really heartbreaking to me.”

READ: ‘It’s heartbreaking’: Pulse survivor says fire set to memorial should be investigated as hate crime

The onePULSE Foundation said it’s grateful to the fire department for the arrest.

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