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Derderians ordered to pay deceased workers' families
A judge rules that the brothers are liable for the funeral expenses and lost wages of four employees. 01:50 PM EST on Friday, March 4, 2005
PROVIDENCE -- A Rhode Island Workers' Compensation Court judge
yesterday ordered the owners of The Station to pay more than $200,000
for funeral expenses and lost wages to the families of a waitress, a
bouncer, a ticket-taker and a door security worker who were killed in
the nightclub fire on Feb. 20, 2003.
Judge Bruce Q. Morin said that the nightclub's owners, brothers Michael
and Jeffrey Derderian, and their company, Derco LLC, are "jointly and
individually" liable for the workers' compensation benefits of the four
employees.
The Derderians' lawyers said they plan to seek a stay of the order while
they appeal the ruling to the state Supreme Court.
At yesterday's pretrial hearing, amid the legal formalities and
dickering over details to determine who was entitled to what benefits,
bits of information emerged about the victims' families.
For the 14-year-old son of nightclub bouncer Tracy King, there was the
matter of a change of address. The boy, Jordan, had moved out of the
Warwick house he used to share with King's two other sons, and is living
with his mother in Providence.
For the 9-year-old son of cocktail waitress Dina DeMaio, there was the
matter of who receives the $732.09 per week that the family's lawyer
says the boy is owed for his mother's lost wages. Should the money for
Justin DeMaio be sent to his legal guardian, Steven Beardsworth, in
Norway, Maine? Or, should it be sent to the boy's grandmother, Patricia
Belanger, who is executor of Dina DeMaio's will, in West Warwick?
The Derderians never purchased the required workers' compensation
coverage when they bought the nightclub. Last August, a state Workers'
Compensation Court judge ordered that the Derderians be held personally
liable for a $1.06-million fine against Derco LLC for failing to carry
the coverage. The Derderians are appealing.
Rhode Island workers' compensation law entitles the family of someone
who dies on the job to receive $15,000 for funeral costs plus a portion
of the deceased person's lost wages. Dependent children are entitled to
benefits until age 18 or, if they are in college, age 23.
The wage estimates in the petitions filed on behalf of the families of
King, 39, and DeMaio, 30, were based upon earnings from their full-time
jobs, as well as their part-time work at The Station.
DeMaio's son is owed an estimated $75,000, including $15,000 in death
benefits, for the last two years.
King earned about $50 working about one night a week as a bouncer, said
Andrew Caslowitz, a lawyer representing the King family.
Kathleen M. Hagerty, the lawyer representing Michael Derderian, took
issue with the estimate of King's wages.
"I believe it was not weekly at The Station," she said, "so I don't
believe it was $50 a week."
"Whether he worked one day or every three or four weeks," Caslowitz
responded, "it still comes out to $50," because the amount is based only
on the weeks he worked.
King also earned $603.10 per week, including overtime, working for
Warwick's highway department, Caslowitz said.
The benefits his family is owed for the last two years, including
funeral costs, total about $78,000, Caslowitz said.
The families of Andrea and Steven Mancini, a couple who lived in
Johnston, have petitioned the court for $15,000 each in death benefits.
Neither of the families petitioned for lost wages. Steven Mancini, 39,
played guitar in the band Fathead, which opened for Great White on the
night of the fire. He was checking IDs at the door; his wife, 28, was
taking tickets.
"Andrea Mancini had no dependents at the time of her death?" Judge Morin
asked.
"That's right, your honor," said a lawyer representing her estate.
Does anyone dispute that Andrea Mancini was an employee of The Station?
asked Morin.
"Your honor," Hagerty replied, "we clearly don't dispute that Andrea
Mancini was an extremely valued and well-loved employee."
Jeffrey B. Pine, the lawyer representing Jeffrey Derderian, said at the
hearing, "It's not the position of my client or Derco to deny benefits
to any employees who deserve benefits . . . [but] the ability to pay is
another matter."
Asked after the hearing whether the Derderians had the assets to pay the
benefits ordered by the judge, Pine replied, "I don't believe they have
anywhere near the resource to satisfy these orders."
The workers' compensation benefits for the four employees together
amount to "over $200,000," Pine said.
Pine and Hagerty made an offer to the families to settle the workers'
compensation benefit petitions prior to yesterday's hearing, Pine said,
but the families rejected the offer, which he declined to disclose.
Lynn Arditi can be reached at (401) 277-7335 or by e-mail at
larditi [at] projo.com
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