Remove ImagesLC Watch Not Guilty! December 21, 2006 It isn't every day that the Liquor Control Board of Adjudication sits through a two-day trial involving a boat charter company accused of overserving a customer to the point that she killed a guy while driving home and then finds said boat company—in this case, Ali`i Nui Charters of Ma`alaea—not guilty on all counts, but it does sometimes happen. It happened Dec. 12, though I have to admit I didn't actually see it. The case started a little after 12:30 in the afternoon of Dec. 7. The board had already dispensed with seven cases—many more than their usual agenda load—when they picked up the Ali`i Nui matter. I was there four and a half hours, and saw two witnesses. It wasn't easy, though Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Jeffrey Temas and Ali`i Nui Attorney Richard Rost made a real effort to turn the whole thing into a gritty Law & Order episode. Read the following exchange—which took place three hours into the trial—and decide for yourself whether they succeeded: Temas: Was there an objection? Rost: Did you hear me make one? Temas: You made some sort of sound. Four and a half hours I sat through Rost and Temas arguing over the "rules of evidence"—the normal courtroom requirements for what witnesses can and can't say which don't apply in adjudication cases because they're not criminal trials. In any case, I slipped out at 5 p.m., during a break. They board stayed until 9 that night, then recessed until Tuesday. And in doing so, they repeated a verdict they made last year, in which Moose McGillycuddy's of Lahaina stood accused of overservice, spent a lot of money on legal representation, fought it and came out victorious. There's no way to tell why the board found for Ali`i Nui, but Rost attributes the verdict to Temas failing to prove that the customer in question was drunk at the time Ali`i Nui Charters last served her. Circumstantial evidence implying guilt may be perfectly admissible in an adjudication hearing, but it's nice to see the board can reject it. |