โ€œGOOD NIGHT, BABEโ€ โ€” The Heartbreaking Final Text Mike Hinrichs Sent His Wife Jessi Pierce Just Hours Before Deadly Fire Killed Her and Their Three Children

WHITE BEAR LAKE, Minnesota โ€” The last message Mike Hinrichs ever sent to his wife was heartbreakingly ordinary.

โ€œGood night, babe.โ€

It was 9:17 p.m. on Friday, March 20, 2026 โ€” a simple, loving goodnight text from a husband who had been away on a short business trip. Jessi Pierce, the beloved NHL reporter and devoted mother of three, replied with a heart emoji and โ€œLove you. See you tomorrow.โ€

Neither of them could have imagined that those would be the final words they would ever exchange.

Just eight hours later, at approximately 5:25 a.m. on Saturday, a ferocious house fire tore through their family home on the 2100 block of Richard Avenue. When firefighters finally forced their way inside the blazing structure, they made the unthinkable discovery: 37-year-old Jessi Pierce and her three young children โ€” 9-year-old Hudson, 7-year-old Cayden, and 4-year-old daughter Avery โ€” were all found deceased in their bedrooms, still in their beds, apparently overcome by smoke and toxic gases while they slept.

The final text from Mike has now emerged as the most devastating detail in a tragedy that has already shattered the Minnesota hockey community and left an entire neighborhood in mourning.

According to sources close to the family, Mike Hinrichs was returning home from his trip early Saturday morning when he received the first frantic calls from neighbors. By the time he reached White Bear Lake, the house he shared with Jessi and their three children was already reduced to a smoldering shell. Firefighters had to physically restrain him from rushing into the still-burning structure.

โ€œHe kept repeating โ€˜I just told her good night,โ€™โ€ one first responder told investigators. โ€œHe was in complete shock.โ€

Fundraiser launched for NHL reporter Jessi Pierce's husband after she died  with their kids in house fire | Daily Mail Online

The fire, now believed to have been caused by an electrical fault in the walls or ceiling, spread rapidly through concealed spaces. Because it began in hidden areas rather than an open flame, smoke and deadly carbon monoxide filled the upstairs bedrooms silently while the family slept. None of the victims showed signs of having woken up or attempted to escape โ€” a detail that has only intensified the horror for loved ones.

Jessi Pierce was a respected and widely admired figure in the NHL media world. For more than a decade she covered the Minnesota Wild with passion, professionalism, and genuine warmth. Colleagues described her as the kind of reporter who remembered every playerโ€™s name, every family story, and always had time to mentor younger journalists. At home, she was a devoted mother who balanced demanding deadlines with raising three active, happy children.

The loss of the entire young family has triggered an outpouring of grief across Minnesota and the broader hockey community. Vigils have been held every evening near the burned-out home. Makeshift memorials of flowers, hockey sticks, stuffed animals, and candles continue to grow. The Minnesota Wild organization released a statement calling Jessi โ€œa bright lightโ€ and offering support to the surviving family members.

Mike Hinrichs, who works in finance, has been described by friends as completely devastated. He is currently staying with relatives and has asked for privacy as he tries to process the unimaginable. The final text he sent his wife โ€” โ€œGood night, babeโ€ โ€” has become a symbol of how quickly normal life can be shattered. Many who knew the couple say it was typical of their loving, low-key relationship โ€” simple affection exchanged even when they were apart.

Fire investigators say the timing of the blaze โ€” in the quiet predawn hours โ€” was particularly cruel. Modern homes with open layouts and energy-efficient insulation can sometimes allow smoke to travel faster and more quietly than older structures, leaving sleeping occupants with almost no warning. Experts are now using the tragedy to renew calls for interconnected smoke and carbon monoxide alarms, regular electrical inspections, and updated wiring in homes built decades ago.

As the official investigation continues, authorities have stressed that no foul play is suspected. The emerging evidence continues to point toward an accidental electrical origin, though the exact source of the fault has not yet been publicly confirmed.

For the surviving family โ€” Jessiโ€™s parents, siblings, and Mikeโ€™s relatives โ€” the pain is compounded by the knowledge that the last words between husband and wife were so ordinary, so full of routine love. โ€œGood night, babeโ€ has now become a final, heartbreaking goodbye that no one saw coming.

In the days since the fire, the story of Jessi Pierce and her three beautiful children has touched people far beyond Minnesota. Tributes continue to pour in from across the NHL, sports media, and ordinary parents who see their own families reflected in this tragedy.

A mother who balanced a successful career with raising three young kids. Three innocent children who should have had their whole lives ahead of them. A husband who sent one last loving text before tragedy struck.

The image of four lives โ€” a mother and her three children โ€” found peacefully asleep in their beds has become a haunting reminder of how fragile and precious ordinary nights truly are.

As White Bear Lake mourns, the final message โ€œGood night, babeโ€ lingers like a ghost โ€” a simple expression of love that became the last words a devoted husband would ever send to the woman and children he cherished.

A family that went to bed on a normal Friday night never woke up.

And a single text message has become an eternal, heartbreaking farewell.