Music, News

Ghost Ship Trial Verdict: Creative Director Acquitted, Jury Hung on Warehouse Operator

Products You May Like

The trial of two operators of Oakland’s Ghost Ship warehouse has resulted in an acquittal for one individual and a hung jury for the other, as ABC 7 San Francisco. Max Harris—the “creative director of the warehouse”—was acquitted on all charges, while the jury failed to come to a full conclusion in the case of Derick Almena, the master tenant of the warehouse. Both men were facing 36 counts of involuntary manslaughter.

In July 2018, Almena and Harris pled no contest to manslaughter and were sentenced to nine and six years in prison, respectively. One month later, however, a California judge rejected the plea deals, stating that the men did not accept “full responsibility and remorse” for the deadly 2016 fire that killed 36 people. The pair were each facing up to 39 years in prison for the dozens of involuntary manslaughter charges.

Derick Almena, who is now 49 years old, was the artist collective leader and master tenant at Ghost Ship; Max Harris, 29, was the acting creative director.

Revisit “After Ghost Ship Fire, Oakland DIY Grapples With a Broken System” on the Pitch.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

‘Megalopolis’ Imax Global Release Will Be Limited; Release Date Contingent On U.S. Distribution But Late September Eyed For IMAX In 20 US Cities; Coppola Live Event Planned – Cannes
’90 Day Fiancé’s Big Ed Cries Over Liz Woods Breakup: ‘She Never Quit — Ever’ (VIDEO)
Analyzing the Trailer for IT ENDS WITH US
‘Civil War’ Secures China Theatrical Release; First For An A24 Production
18 Shocking Secrets About One Tree Hill Revealed