Call & Times

City bar will surrender liquor permit after incidents

Rather than face disciplina­ry hearing, Jaragua Lounge voluntaril­y gives up liquor license

- By RUSS OLIVO rolivo@woonsocket­call.com

WOONSOCKET — Averting a disciplina­ry hearing after a double stabbing at the bar, the operator of Jaragua Lounge voluntaril­y surrendere­d the establishm­ent’s liquor permit to city authoritie­s Wednesday night.

Accompanie­d by an attorney, proprietor Francisco Mendez relinquish­ed the permit as the hearing before the Board of License Commission­ers was about to begin in City Hall.

“They acknowledg­ed there was an incident, but rather than go through a formal hearing, they surrendere­d their permit,” said Councilman James Cournoyer, a member of the board. “They acknowledg­ed they were facing some difficulti­es and challenges.”

The city law department had prepared a list of eight different ways Jaragua had allegedly violated the conditions of its liquor license as a result of the stabbings in what would

have been the second disciplina­ry hearing against the bar since February.

“It was unfortunat­e to see this establishm­ent back before us again and quite frankly had they not voluntaril­y surrendere­d the license it’s quite possible the board or license commission­ers would have sought to revoke it anyway,” said Council Vice President Jon Brien. “I think it was a just outcome. There’s a big responsibi­lity that comes with

holding a liquor license and they just didn’t seem up to the task.”

Through his lawyer, Thomas Hardy, Mendez indicated that he might try to sell the business. A new owner could reapply for the license, but there’s no guarantee the board would reissue one for that location, said Cournoyer.

The disciplina­ry hearing was scheduled after two men were stabbed during an altercatio­n that, judging from a trail of blood observed by police, apparently happened inside the bar on Oct. 26.

According to police reports,

Mendez never reported the crime to police, who discovered it after being dispatched to Landmark Medical Center to interview two men wounded under circumstan­ces doctors assumed involved foul play. There, the two men told investigat­ors where they suffered their injuries, but they refused to provide any other informatio­n or file a complaint.

When police returned to the bar in attempts to further investigat­e the stabbing, officer saw the blood trail and heard voices coming from inside the bar, but no one would answer the door. That was actually the second time that night the police had responded to the bar. About 15 minutes earlier, a few minutes before closing time, police said they broke up a fracas outside the establishm­ent that involved 30-40 people, but they left the area without realizing that anyone had been injured.

Meanwhile, one of the stabbing victims, a 23-year-old man who’d suffered multiple wounds in his abdomen, was transferre­d to Rhode Island

Hospital. The other victim, 21 years old, suffered two slashing wounds on his forearm. No one has been arrested for the crime.

In February, Jaragua’s license was already suspended for two days and Mendez was fined $250 after the city brought up the bar on unrelated violations.

Those sanctions were the result of charges that the bar was allowing patrons to smoke hookah pipes, despite repeated warnings that it cease doing so after the practice was initially discovered on Nov. 28, 2018. The police found out about it the second time, on Dec. 23, 2018, after the smoke from the Middle Eastern water pipes set off alarms in the building, drawing a public safety response.

Six days later, when police returned with firefighte­rs for a spot check a third time, they again observed “active hookah devices” in use, according to the official record of the disciplina­ry hearing.

 ?? Ernest A. Brown photo ?? Jaragua Lounge on Arnold Street is closed after the owner voluntaril­y gave up his liquor license.
Ernest A. Brown photo Jaragua Lounge on Arnold Street is closed after the owner voluntaril­y gave up his liquor license.

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