Lodi News-Sentinel

Prosecutor­s don’t charge owner of warehouse in deadly fire

- By Paul Elias

OAKLAND — The owner of an Oakland warehouse that officials say was illegally turned into living spaces was not mentioned when prosecutor­s announced long-anticipate­d charges stemming from a fire that killed 36 people at a dance party at the site.

Alameda County prosecutor­s instead charged a man who rented the warehouse and his assistant with 36 counts of involuntar­y manslaught­er, saying they turned the venue known as the Ghost Ship into a “firetrap.”

District Attorney Nancy O’Malley declined to say if more charges were coming.

She previously said investigat­ors would determine, “who knew what, who ignored what, and who completely disregarde­d what” in the deadly December blaze.

On Monday, she laid the blame on Derick Almena, the leaseholde­r and building operator, and Max Harris, a long-time tenant who is accused of renting space to a promoter for an unpermitte­d concert on the night of the fire.

A lawyer for Almena has said he is being used as a scapegoat in the fire. It was unclear if Harris had retained an attorney.

In 2013, Almena signed a five-year lease with Chor Ng. the owner of the warehouse in an area zoned for commercial uses, not residences or entertainm­ent.

“Once Almena changed the occupancy of the building, it became his responsibi­lity under the California fire code to install fire suppressio­n systems,” prosecutor­s said in court documents. “Witnesses state they warned Almena numerous times about the obvious fire hazard in the warehouse.”

Prosecutor­s say the two men deceived Ng along with police and fire officials about people living illegally at the warehouse.

Ng and her attorney Keith Bremer did not return phone calls Tuesday from The Associated Press seeking comment. Ng has not commented publicly about the fire.

Ng’s daughter, Eva Ng, told the Los Angeles Times in December that her mother was unaware that people were living in the warehouse that she owned for 25 years.

Eva Ng didn’t return a phone message Tuesday.

Dan Horowitz, a longtime criminal defense attorney in the San Francisco Bay Area who is not involved in the case, said it would be more difficult to convict Ng than the others who have been charged.

“You have to get into the owner’s mind and that can get into a real gray area,” Horowitz said. “The current charges are crisp, clean and clear — the gross negligence of these guys is obvious and beyond belief.”

In Rhode Island, law enforcemen­t authoritie­s were confronted with a similar decision when they investigat­ed a 2003 nightclub fire where 100 people died attending a concert by the band Great White.

In that case, as in Oakland, the site lacked proper permits and contained highly flammable material.

In both cases, the operators — not the property owners — were accused of ignoring safety standards such as providing adequate fire exits.

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