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How much will defendants pay for 2013 collapse? Salvation Army faces biggest bite

A Philadelphia jury is to return to court Friday to determine how much the Salvation Army and four other defendants will have to pay for the 2013 building collapse that crushed the charity's thrift store in Center City, resulting in the deaths of seven people.

After hearing 15 weeks of trial testimony, the jury surprised everyone involved in the case by returning a verdict against all the defendants after four hours of deliberation Tuesday afternoon.

In making its decision, the panel apportioned blame by percentages against each defendant, a factor that will determine how much each will pay.

All the principals were found to have played a role in the June 5, 2013, disaster and all but one, demolition contractor Griffin Campbell, to have exhibited negligent and outrageous conduct that showed "a reckless indifference to the interest of others."

Six people were killed and 13 were injured that day. One of the injured died 23 days later.

Those whom the jury said will have to pay damages were:

• Richard Basciano, 91, the wealthy New York real estate developer whose building undergoing demolition collapsed, crushing the thrift store at 22nd and Market Streets. The lawsuits contended he hired a cheap, inexperienced contractor to do the demolition.

• Plato A. Marinakos Jr., the Center City architect whom Basciano and his STB Investments Corp. hired to monitor demolition of the four-story Hoagie City building. It was Marinakos who recommended Campbell for the job. According to trial testimony, Marinakos knew the building was near collapse and told no one.

• The Salvation Army. Although the Salvation Army lost the store and two of its employees in the disaster, the lawsuits contended it also was liable because its officers ignored warnings of danger and a potential collapse from Basciano's top aide, Thomas Simmonds.

The jury found that the only two men criminally charged and convicted in the collapse, Campbell and excavator operator Sean Benschop, were the least responsible for the purposes of assessing damages. Both men are serving long prison terms and are considered penniless.

Of all the defendants, the Salvation Army could be impacted most significantly by the verdicts. In apportioning responsibility for the harm caused to the shoppers in the collapse – five who died and seven injured – the jury found that the Salvation Army bore 75 percent of the liability, Basciano 5 percent, and his STB Investments Corp. 13 percent. The jury found Marinakos bore 5 percent of the liability, and Campbell and Benschop just 1 percent each.

Legally, the two Salvation Army employees killed and five injured were not permitted to sue the charity for damages. For the employees, the jury found that Basciano and STB were each liable for 34 percent of the responsibility and Marinakos 30 percent. Again, the jury found that Campbell and Benschop were each responsible for 1 percent.

Although Basciano is considered to be a multimillionaire, the Salvation Army has the deepest pockets among the defendants. According to the charity's 2015 annual report on its website, the national organization has $14.8 billion in assets and took in $2.9 billion in revenue. Sixty-two percent of the revenue came from direct public support and 21 percent from its thrift stores. It is the nation's fourth largest charity, according t0 Forbes.

Sarmina told the jury to return to court on Friday to begin a damages phase in which jurors will decide how much money each defendant should pay.

None of the lawyers or principals in the trial was permitted to comment, bound by an absolute gag order Sarmina imposed before the trial began.

Of the defendants, only Marinakos was present for the verdicts, sitting alone, quietly, near the rear of the courtroom.

On the other side, sat former city treasurer Nancy Winkler, whose 24-year-old daughter, Anne Bryan, was among the dead. Winkler, who attended virtually every day of the trial since it began Sept. 19, literally ran through City Hall to the courtroom after receiving word that the jury had reached a verdict. Her husband, Jay Bryan, joined her a short time later.

On the day of the collapse, an unsupported three- to four-story brick wall remaining from a vacant Hoagie City building under demolition loomed over the one-story Salvation Army store. As Benschop's excavator picked at another part of the building, the wall toppled and crushed the thrift store.

The Hoagie City building was one of a series of rundown, vacant commercial buildings in the 2100 block of Market Street that was being razed for what Basciano hoped would be a twin-tower residential-commercial complex.

The score of lawsuits, consolidated for the purpose of this trial, contended that Basciano and top aide Thomas Simmonds cut corners in the demolition, hiring without research an inexperienced Center City architect, Marinakos, to monitor demolition.

Although the City of Philadelphia and its Department of Licenses & Inspections were heavily criticized in the media in public hearings over the tragedy, the city was never among the defendants. Pretrial rulings held that none of the actions of L&I employees rose to the level of an exception to the city's sovereign immunity protecting it from being sued.

Marinakos was sued for recommending that Basciano hire an equally inexperienced, unlicensed North Philadelphia contractor, Campbell, to do the demolition. Campbell then hired Benschop to expedite the demolition project.

The Salvation Army was sued because its officers purportedly ignored warnings of a possible collapse from Simmonds, and never passed on the warnings to the store workers or customers.

Each defendant denied responsibility for the collapse and worked to convince the jury that the blame belonged to the other defendants.

One defendant who did not have to worry about the verdict was Jack Higgins, an architect from Northeastern Pennsylvania whom the Salvation Army hired to catalog the thrift store's condition to prove later claims for demolition-related damage. Judge Sarmina on Tuesday dismissed Higgins as a defendant.

The plaintiffs maintained that Higgins ignored the illegal demolition ongoing next door and thus also played a role in the collapse. Higgins' lawyers argued that he had a strictly limited work assignment and was at the thrift store only one day, May 20, 2013, weeks before the disaster.