| March 19, 2008 Manager who sparked deadly fire out on parole
|
(NECN: Cranston, RI) - The first man to go to prison for his role in the 2003 Station nightclub fire was released from prison Wednesday.
Daniel Biechele set off the pyrotechnics that sparked the deadly fire. He's got paroled after serving less than half of his four year prison sentence.
Biechele is the former tour manager for the 1980s rock band Great White and he pleaded guilty in 2006 to 100 counts of involuntary manslaughter for his part in the fire at the West Warwick nightclub.
NECN's Brad Puffer has more from Rhode Island.
More from the Associated Press.
CRANSTON, R.I. (AP) - The band manager whose pyrotechnics
display sparked a nightclub fire that killed 100 people in 2003 was
freed from prison Wednesday after serving less than half of his
four-year sentence.
Daniel Biechele, 31, walked from the front door of the state's
minimum security prison into his lawyer's car about noon Wednesday
and was driven away. He did not respond to questions as he got into
the vehicle.
His attorney, Thomas Briody, has declined to comment on
Biechele's future plans, but Florida prison officials have said
Biechele would serve his parole there, in his home state.
Biechele, the former tour manager for the 1980s rock band Great
White, pleaded guilty in 2006 to 100 counts of involuntary
manslaughter for his part in the fire at The Station nightclub in
West Warwick.
Sparks from the pyrotechnics display lit at the start of Great
White's
set on the night of Feb. 20, 2003, ignited flammable foam
that lined the walls and ceiling of the one-story wooden roadhouse.
The flames sent out toxic black smoke and created temperatures so
high that most of the dead were killed within minutes. Panicked
concertgoers became trapped at the club's front door. More than 200
people were injured.
Biechele was indicted along with club owners Jeffrey and Michael
Derderian on 200 counts each of involuntary manslaughter. He was to
have been the first of the three men to stand trial, but instead
struck a plea deal with prosecutors. He got four years, plus an
additional 11 years suspended and three years probation.
The parole board unanimously decided in September to release
Biechele early, saying he had shown genuine remorse and had the
support of family members of those killed.
Many family members have said they appreciated Biechele's
apologies - he sent each family a handwritten letter after his
sentencing to express his remorse. He also tearfully apologized at
his sentencing hearing, saying he wasn't sure he could ever forgive
himself, and didn't expect forgiveness from anyone else.
Several believe the Derderian brothers bear the largest part of
the blame. Many also complain that others were not charged -
including members of Great White and the town fire inspector, who
inspected the club several times but never noted the dangerous foam
in his reports.
Michael Derderian, also serving a four-year sentence after
pleading no contest to involuntary manslaughter for installing the
foam, is due out on parole in October 2009. Jeffrey Derderian was
spared prison time and sentenced instead to probation and 500 hours
of community service, a sentence he completed last year.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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