Packaging Co. Settles For $25 Million In GREAT WHITE Fire

June 13, 2008, 16 years ago

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According to the Associated Press, a packaging company sued after a Rhode Island nightclub burned down five years ago has agreed to pay $25 million to survivors and relatives of the 100 people killed, according to court papers filed Friday.

The settlement with Elmwood Park, N.J.-based Sealed Air Corp. is the latest in a series stemming from the February 2003 fire at The Station nightclub in West Warwick, which began when pyrotechnics used by the rock band GREAT WHITE ignited flammable soundproofing on the club's walls.

The settlement brings to nearly $150 million the total amount of money offered to survivors and victims' relatives. It also moves the case, which initially named dozens of people and companies as defendants, closer to a resolution.

The victims' lawyers say Sealed Air made polyethylene foam that was installed in the club in 1996. They say the foam burned too easily and produced toxic gas.

Ken Aurichio, a spokesman for Sealed Air, said the company's packaging material was allegedly misused as soundproofing, and noted that it was never determined the company even made the material in the club. Sealed Air did not admit wrongdoing.

"Though Sealed Air was not responsible for the fire, we believe that this result is in the best interest of all concerned," Aurichio said.

The foam at issue in Friday's settlements is different from the flammable polyurethane foam placed on the building's walls by club owners Jeffrey and Michael Derderian, who took over the club in 2000.

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