Attorney: Man is a scapegoat in deadly California fire
OAKLAND, Calif. — The attorney for one of two men on trial in connection with a fire that killed 36 people at a San Francisco Bay Area warehouse two years ago told the jury in closing arguments Tuesday that his client has been used as a scapegoat and the evidence shows he should be acquitted.
Curtis Briggs, attorney for Max Harris, pointed out that Harris had not been there when Derick Almena signed the lease in November 2013 and that it wasn’t him who threw the dance party the night of the fire in December 2016. Harris, he said, didn’t design the warehouse’s interior, which was packed with rugs, furniture and other flammable material; it wasn’t even his stuff inside — Almena admitted that it was his. Harris didn’t even build the stairs that led to the second floor, where the music show was held, he added.
“But instead, they ask you to convict Max Harris anyway,” Briggs repeated after nearly every example.
“There’s a theme here: No matter what, convict Max Harris,” Briggs said, according to the East Bay Times .