Boston Herald

Sons of Boston pleads case before board

- By RICK SOBEY

The downtown bar where its bouncer is accused of killing a Marine veteran was grilled by the city’s licensing board on Tuesday as the pub faces a litany of violations.

Sons of Boston bar — whose lawyer during the licensing board hearing said the fatal incident was “not foreseeabl­e” — did not conduct a background check of murder suspect Alvaro Larrama before the pub hired him as a bouncer.

Sons of Boston has already lost its entertainm­ent license after the fatal stabbing outside the Union Street bar last month. Larrama, a 39-year-old East Boston father of four, is charged with stabbing 23-year-old U.S. Marine veteran Daniel Martinez to death after the pair apparently got into a confrontat­ion.

The pub was in front of the Boston Licensing Board on Tuesday, as the board members listed several violations from that incident. Those violations include an employee assaulting a patron with a deadly weapon, employee making bodily contact with a patron, armed security without prior board approval, and failing to call police.

Licensing Board Chairwoman Kathleen Joyce asked a series of questions to bar employees, including if they had conducted a background check of Larrama. He was not CORI checked by the pub, they admitted. Larrama previously served time for larceny conviction­s, as well as a drug-related crime.

Commission­er Liam Curran called the lack of a background check “willful ignorance.”

During the hearing, the bar’s lawyer Carolyn Conway said this “tragic and senseless death” at the bar was “not foreseeabl­e by the licensee.”

“We just did not condone anybody having any weapons,” she said, adding, “The extent of what happened here was just not foreseeabl­e by the licensee, and under the case law, that is the standard.”

Larrama, who was working as a bouncer at the bar, has pleaded not guilty to murdering Martinez, who was in town from Illinois and out celebratin­g St. Patrick’s Day with a Marine Corps buddy.

Martinez and his friend went to the Sons of Boston pub on Union Street, spending time inside the bar without incident. They then left and apparently got back in line to return to the bar.

While standing in line, Martinez and the bouncer appeared to get into a confrontat­ion, according to video obtained by police. Martinez then began walking away, and Larrama allegedly chased after him. The bouncer is accused of then attacking Martinez and stabbing him to death.

Larrama allegedly went inside the bar after the stabbing, cleaning blood off of himself, and turning his shirt inside out, then left the pub through the back door.

Following the initial crime scene investigat­ion, the Boston Police’s Licensed Premises Unit returned to issue violations to the bar, ultimately saying that the establishm­ent had armed security without prior board approval.

The Licensing Board took the matter under advisement on Tuesday. The board on Thursday will take a vote on potential punishment­s.

 ?? NANCY LANE / HERALD STAFF FILE ?? AWAITING RULING: The Sons of Boston bar has already lost its entertainm­ent license and now is accused of several other charges relating to the fatal stabbing of a patron by a bouncer last month.
NANCY LANE / HERALD STAFF FILE AWAITING RULING: The Sons of Boston bar has already lost its entertainm­ent license and now is accused of several other charges relating to the fatal stabbing of a patron by a bouncer last month.
 ?? ?? MARTINEZ
MARTINEZ

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