Imperial Valley Press

CALIFORNIA BRIEFS

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Derick Almena and Max Harris were charged with involuntar­y manslaught­er in the deaths of 36 people at a December 2016 party at the so-called Ghost Ship warehouse in Oakland.

Alameda County prosecutor­s say the men acted with criminal negligence when they illegally converted the industrial building into a residence for artists and held unpermitte­d events inside.

During closing arguments after a four-month trial, prosecutor­s told jurors that 35 of the victims died on the upper level of the warehouse because they received no warning and had little chance to escape down a narrow, ramshackle staircase.

Deputy District Attorney Autrey James said Almena failed to install smoke alarms, sprinklers and other safety devices and ignored repeated requests to obtain proper permits because he wanted to avoid inspection­s.

The prosecutor said Harris was “no innocent bystander” because he acted like a manager by collecting rent and coordinati­ng events at the warehouse.

The defense countered that the men were being used as scapegoats and said city workers share the blame for not raising concerns about fire hazards. They also argued that the fire was set deliberate­ly by outsiders. No official cause was ever determined by investigat­ors, so arson could not be ruled out.

Almena’s attorney rejected prosecutor­s’ characteri­zation that the warehouse was a “death trap” and said he wouldn’t have risked the lives of his three children by having them live inside the warehouse.

Almena and Harris have also been named in lawsuits from victims’ families saying that Oakland’s fire and building department­s failed to inspect the warehouse annually as required. The lawsuits say inspectors would have discovered the illegal conversion­s.

The owners of the building were also named in lawsuits. They have not been charged and have not spoken about the fire.

Almena and Harris were set to be sentenced to nine and six years in prison, respective­ly, after pleading no contest to manslaught­er last year. But a judge threw out their pleas after many of the victims’ families objected, saying their proposed sentences were too lenient.

They each face up to 39 years in prison.

He jabbed Wednesday at Republican President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly criticized California’s Democratic leaders for poor forest management.

Newsom says 33 of 35 forest-thinning projects are on pace for completion by year’s end after he eased environmen­tal laws. They are designed to slow the spread of wildfires near more than 200 communitie­s in fire-prone areas.

Records show many of the projects are getting a slow start. Newsom spoke after touring a project in the Sierra Nevada foothills northeast of Sacramento that officials say is about 30 percent complete even as the state enters the height of wildfire season.

The governor says the state is also hiring nearly 400 additional seasonal firefighte­rs.

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