Cicilline Ally Pichardo Overrules Providence Police, Reopens The Vault After Shooting

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

Cicilline Ally Pichardo Overrules Providence Police, Reopens The Vault After Shooting

The Providence Board of Licenses voted on Monday to reopen The Vault, a week after a shooting outside the Federal Hill club -- which is located in a building that until recently was owned by Congressman David Cicilline, and is currently owned by his brother, convicted felon John Cicilline.  

GoLocalTV: See Video of the Shooting Outside The Vault -- and More -- ABOVE

The shooting occurred early Tuesday morning last week, just days before Rep. Cicilline joined a group of Democrats on the U.S. House of Representatives floor to stage a sit-in in support of gun control.

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Read: Cicilline Helped Lead House Sit-In, Family Owns Building Tied to Repeated Violence HERE

Board Chair Senator Juan Pichardo (left) and Former Mayor and now Congressman David Cicilline, whose brother owns the building where gun violence occurred last week.
The Board of Licenses shut down the The Vault for five days following the incident in the early morning on June. Assistant City Solicitor Mario Martone recommended on Monday that the club remain closed for ten days, incur a fine, and be made to provide police detail moving forward. 

The move by Martone came following video footage of the incident from security cameras across the street on Atwells Avenue, as well as testimony by Sgt. David Tejada on the incident broaching greater public safety issues associated with the club. 

"People who are behaving appropriately are not removed by security with their arms around their necks," said Martone, following the footage of the hours leading up to the shooting being shown at the Board of Licenses Monday, which showed the shooter waiting outside the club after he had been removed by bouncers. "The board has on numerous occasions said if there's an issue, call the police - let the police let you take care of the issue."

Cicilline ally and Board of Licenses Chair Senator Juan Pichardo motioned to re-open the club immediately however -- with detail on weekends and holidays -- which was approved by the board, with the exception of Board member Johanna Harris, who was the lone dissenter. 

"To me, [the safety issues] are directly related to the club," said Harris during the meeting. 

Sparring Over Safety

The streets outside The Vault had been the scene of a double stabbing in September 2014, but as the incident did not happen directly inside the club, it was not listed as part of the club's legal history at the Board of Licenses meeting on Monday. 

Video footage was shown Monday of a patron leaving The Vault - and soon after shooting onto Atwells Avenue.
Both Martone and Tejada spoke to their concerns about public safety and the response from the club Monday, including the fact that the gunman is still at large, and the gun, which wounded one, has not been recovered. 

Lawyer Peter Petrarca for The Vault argued that the event was "not foreseeable," and the club should not be penalized. 

"It's not the responsibility of the licensee," said Petrarca. "There's no way they could have stopped it."

Pichardo, who was appointed to the Board of Licenses in 2013 and became President last year, was first elected to the Rhode Island Senate in 2002.

On Monday, Pichardo ruled that the club should be reopened immediately, and that police detail is to be provided by the club on weekends and holidays. The board voted to review The Vault again in ten days. 


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