Los Angeles prosecutors charged that Becker built a Hollywood Hills West mansion with such disregard for public safety and building codes that he should be held criminally liable for the death of a Los Angeles firefighter who was crushed by a thousand pounds of ceiling while battling a blaze there in 2011.
Becker, 49, was set to go on trial for involuntary manslaughter and faced up to four years in jail. But on Friday, the case came to an abrupt end with a judge agreeing to a deal that will keep the architect in jail for a total of only six months in exchange for a no-contest plea.
Prosecutors, the victim's family and firefighters opposed the resolution, saying Becker deserved more punishment. About 15 uniformed firefighters attended the court hearing Friday to lend their support. More than 400 firefighters submitted letters to the court.
In offering the deal, Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Robert Perry questioned the strength of the prosecution's case. He suggested that a Los Angeles building and safety inspector who reviewed Becker's home may share some of the blame.
The inspector, Brad Bescos, signed off on the house three months before the fire, according to court records. During an interview with investigators and then in his testimony at a preliminary hearing in 2012, Bescos offered conflicting accounts about whether he saw some of the building code violations or whether Becker might have hidden them during an inspection. The confusion damaged the inspector's credibility in the eyes of the judge.
"There are serious issues of proof for responsibility of the loss of life," Perry said.
Deputy Dist. Atty. Sean Carney, who had offered Becker a plea deal of two years in jail, criticized the judge's offer Friday, saying it missed an opportunity to send a stronger message to architects who might be considering skirting the rules.
"It is a sentence that undermines any deterrent effect — that says they can blame it on city bureaucracy's negligence," Carney said outside the courtroom, flanked by firefighters.
"I don't think six months in jail is worth what all these guys went through," retired firefighter Kevin Mulvehill tearfully told reporters. "Everyone who responded has a life sentence."
After 11 years of designing massive villas on a Spanish island, Becker had set his sights on a new challenge: a lot on Viewsite Terrace straddling a hillside a mile up from West Hollywood's ritzy Sunset Plaza.
He bought the land for $905,000 in 2009, then began designing and overseeing the $4-million construction of what was to be his 12,000-square-foot home. The German national was not licensed by the California Architects Board.
The living room, kitchen, garage and deck would sit at street level and two other floors would drop behind the cliff, offering unfettered views of the Los Angeles Basin.
An infinity pool, floor-to-ceiling windows, a maid's room, nine bathrooms and six bedrooms were built on the palm-tree-lined property. The producers of a German reality TV show hosted by Heidi Klum paid $100,000 to use the home for two months.
Disregarding the manufacturer's safety warnings in favor of aesthetics, Becker placed a long, natural-gas fire trough into a recessed wall of the mansion's living room, prosecutors alleged.
The pebble-filled fire pit came with a notice that it could lead to loss of life if installed anywhere but outdoors. It sat along an alcove that was 15 feet long, 18 inches high and 18 inches above the floor. Flames rose just two inches shy of the top. It had been turned on the night of the fire, but authorities couldn't determine if it had been turned off before the ignition box below led to the larger blaze.
Becker surrounded the fireplace — and three others in the house like it — with wood and drywall instead of non-flammable materials. Each unit with installation cost $6,000, according to court files. If done properly, authorities said, the price would have been 10 times more.
"No reasonable person would build a fireplace out of wood, because what happens is the obvious result, the wood catches fire," Carney said.
A vent that should have been angled upward was flat and just 4 inches wide, prosecutors said. And without any fire-stop materials inside the walls to impede the flames, the fire surged to the attic.
The ceiling collapsed about 45 minutes after the 911 call. A firefighter said in court he had never seen anything like it. If built to code, the attic should have been free of flames for at least the first hour, authorities said.
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