WARWICK, R.I., Sept. 29, 2006

Nightclub Fire Hearing Gets Emotional

Victims' Families Angry Over Plea Deal Given To Club's Owners

  • Play CBS Video Video Grief Over Nightclub Plea

    Drew Levinson reports from Warwick, R.I., where families of loved ones lost in a tragic nightclub fire got a chance to express their grief and anger.

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    CBS News RAW: Surviving family members of Station fire victims in Rhode Island speak out about the injustice they feel regarding the plea deal granted to nightclub owners.

  • Jay McLaughlin reads a statement during court proceedings for Michael and Jeffrey Derderian in Kent County Superior Court in Warwick, R.I. on Friday, Sept. 29, 2006.

    Jay McLaughlin reads a statement during court proceedings for Michael and Jeffrey Derderian in Kent County Superior Court in Warwick, R.I. on Friday, Sept. 29, 2006.  (AP Photo)

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(AP)  One owner of a nightclub where 100 people died in a fire sparked by a band's pyrotechnics received four years in prison Friday, and the other was sentenced to probation as the victims' relatives vented their anger over what they considered to be overly lenient sentences.

Michael Derderian, 45, who received the prison time, and his brother, Jeffrey, 39, pleaded no contest to 100 counts of involuntary manslaughter for the 2003 fire, which quickly engulfed The Station nightclub because they had installed highly flammable foam to ease neighbors' noise concerns.

“Lady Justice in Rhode Island is blind, but she's also deaf,” said Jay McLaughlin — a relative of Sandy and Michael Hoogasian, two of those who died — before he walked back to his seat to applause from victim' families.

The testimony, which often deviated from the judge's instructions to cover only the fire's effect on their lives and not the plea or legal issues, lasted for several hours before Jeffrey and Michael Derderian were sentenced.

Judge Francis Darigan, wanting to avoid a long and heart-wrenching trial, said as the hearing began that he would not reconsider the deals.

Still, many family members tried to change the judge's mind.

“I know you can do better, and I'm asking you to,” said Susan Howorth-Pritchard, whose brother, Carlton Howorth, III, died in the fire. “It's the right thing to do.”

After the relatives had testified for about two hours, Jeffrey Derderian was slumped in his seat, choking back tears. Earlier, his lawyer took off her glasses, dabbed at her eyes and sobbed. Michael began to cry when Derderian family friend Jody King, whose brother, Tracey, was a club bouncer and died in the fire, spoke of his brother.

The fast-moving fire — one of the deadliest in U.S. history — began when pyrotechnics set off by the band Great White ignited foam that the Derderian brothers had put up for soundproofing. One hundred people were killed, including many who were trapped and died at the doorways, overcome by fumes and smoke. More than 200 people were injured.

At the start of Friday's hearing, lights were dimmed and a voice recited the names of the 100 people killed, as video screens displayed photographs, each with a name, age and hometown.

Then began the testimony by their relatives, many of whom had wanted far stiffer punishments as well as a trial, where they could find out more about how and why their loved ones died.

Claire Bruyere said her daughter Bonnie Hamelin was now in a place where “there is no corruption or negligence.”

“She was let down by the system, state and even me. I can't reassure her that someone was held responsible for her death,” Bruyere said. She was applauded as she finished her statement.

The flames and toxic fumes that broke out on Feb. 20, 2003, during the concert quickly consumed the one-story wooden building in West Warwick, 13 miles south of Providence, at The Station club. Panicked concertgoers were left in a logjam at the front exit.

The fire, the fourth-deadliest nightclub blaze in U.S. history, prompted an overhaul of Rhode Island's fire codes, a tide of lawsuits and criminal charges against the Derderians and former Daniel Biechele, former tour manager for the 1980s heavy metal band.

Biechele was sentenced in May to four years in prison after pleading guilty to involuntary manslaughter for igniting the stage explosives.

Criminal charges against all three defendants were resolved without any of the men going to trial.

Michael Derderian received the harsher sentence because he purchased the foam, defense attorney Kathleen Hagerty said. She has said the brothers were not warned the material was dangerous or violated the fire code.

The foam was used after neighbors complained about the club's loud music.

A federal civil lawsuit filed by nearly 300 people who were injured or lost loved ones is still pending.

©MMVI, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by sjones98811 October 1, 2006 10:34 PM EDT
It has taken far too long for this case to come to close.Yes people are responsible for the massive number of lost lives, and at the sme time it does not change what happened or how people feel.No amount of prison time, no action can be inforced, that would change the events that took place. There is no way to erase the suffering of losing a loved one in such tragic circumstance.Community service would be better served by these individuals.They did act in a reckless manor by allowing things to be in place that allowed this accident. I know they had no idea that this would happen, but it does not excuse the fact it was their fault that the chain of events took place that caused this to happen.They have to live with the guilt,and prison will not alter or improve anything.
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by Geneius September 30, 2006 1:34 PM EDT
What can be accomplished by persecuting these men? Will the victims friends and families feel better knowing that someone is suffering in a jail cell? I think these men are suffering terribly as it is for this accident. They did not intend for this to happen.
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by gmond September 29, 2006 6:58 PM EDT
There were clear violations of the fire code, but the club was operating. Who is responsible for that? I can well understand the families of the victims not wanting to let this go.
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by siddin-2009 September 29, 2006 6:36 PM EDT
Why do people ALWAYS want to blame someone for a death that occurs? Its already happened, its in the past, get over it.
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