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  • The Ghost Ship warehouse is seen this aerial view from...

    The Ghost Ship warehouse is seen this aerial view from 31st Avenue and International Boulevard in the Fruitvale district of Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, Nov. 22, 2017. Dec. 2 marks the one-year anniversary of the deadly fire which killed 36 people. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • Darin Marshall, an Oakland resident who lives close to the...

    Darin Marshall, an Oakland resident who lives close to the GhostShip, said, "I've never seen anything like it and it's terrifying." (Photo by Darin Marshall)

  • A photo of the three-alarm fire at the live-work warehouse...

    A photo of the three-alarm fire at the live-work warehouse residence, called the “GhostShip” in the Fruitvale district that started on Friday, Dec. 2, 2016. Nine people were killed in the fire. (Photos by Oakland Fire Department)

  • Debris from the Ghost Ship fire is seen in Oakland,...

    Debris from the Ghost Ship fire is seen in Oakland, Calif. on Tuesday, July 11, 2017. (Kristopher Skinner/Bay Area News Group)

  • An aerial photo from KGO-TV shows the GhostShip building, which...

    An aerial photo from KGO-TV shows the GhostShip building, which caught fire on Saturday, December 3, 2016 in Oakland. (photo by KGO-TV)

  • Kelly Jewett, left, and Ani Sabillo, embrace each other as...

    Kelly Jewett, left, and Ani Sabillo, embrace each other as they stand in front of a makeshift memorial during the first anniversary of the Ghost Ship warehouse fire where 36 people died in Oakland, Calif., on Friday, Dec. 2, 2017. Both Jewett and Sabillo knew multiple friends who died in the fire. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)

  • The Ghost Ship warehouse is seen this aerial view from...

    The Ghost Ship warehouse is seen this aerial view from 31st Avenue and International Boulevard in the Fruitvale district of Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, Nov. 22, 2017. The area to the bottom right is where the makeshift staircase to the second floor was located. Dec. 2 marks the one-year anniversary of the deadly fire which killed 36 people. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • Sam Maxwell, left, finishes a physical therapy session with caregiver...

    Sam Maxwell, left, finishes a physical therapy session with caregiver Ernest Mena, not pictured, as his father Bill Maxwell gets his wheelchair at their home in Stockton, Calif., on Thursday, Nov. 30, 2017. Maxwell, 33, was the last person to make it out of Oakland's Ghost Ship warehouse fire, but is recovering from extreme smoke inhalation and a series of complications that left him in a medically-induced coma for nearly five weeks. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • Sam Maxwell at his home in Stockton, Calif., on Thursday,...

    Sam Maxwell at his home in Stockton, Calif., on Thursday, Nov. 30, 2017. Maxwell, 33, was the last person to make it out of Oakland's Ghost Ship warehouse fire, but is recovering from extreme smoke inhalation and a series of complications that left him in a medically-induced coma for nearly five weeks. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • Vanessa Plotkin was killed in the Dec. 2, 2016 Ghost...

    Vanessa Plotkin was killed in the Dec. 2, 2016 Ghost Ship fire in Oakland. (Facebook)

  • Billy Dixon was killed in the Dec. 2, 2016 Ghost...

    Billy Dixon was killed in the Dec. 2, 2016 Ghost Ship fire in Oakland. (Facebook)

  • A Facebook photo of Barrett Clark, who was among the...

    A Facebook photo of Barrett Clark, who was among the revelers killed in the "Ghost Ship" fire in Oakland, Calif., on Friday, Dec. 2, 2016 (Facebook)

  • Amanda Allen Kershaw was killed in the Dec. 2, 2016...

    Amanda Allen Kershaw was killed in the Dec. 2, 2016 Ghost Ship fire in Oakland. (Facebook)

  • Kimberly Gregory visits as muralist Mel Waters paints her daughter,...

    Kimberly Gregory visits as muralist Mel Waters paints her daughter, Michela Gregory, on a mural alongside her boyfriend, Alex Vega, in San Francisco, Calif., Saturday, Feb. 18, 2017. Gregory and Vega were in each other's arms when they were killed in last December's Ghost Ship warehouse fire. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)

  • Ghost Ship victims -- -- *Mike Mayer* News Editor /...

    Ghost Ship victims -- -- *Mike Mayer* News Editor / Page Designer | Editorial mmayer@bayareanewsgroup.com 925 943-8058 Direct @mikem99 bayareanewsgroup.com *Over 5 million engaged readers weekly*

  • Party promoter Jon Hrabko beckoned guests to Oakland's "Ghost Ship"...

    Party promoter Jon Hrabko beckoned guests to Oakland's "Ghost Ship" warehouse for a night of electronic dance music Dec. 2, 2016. The party turned deadly after a fire broke out. (Facebook) -- -- *Tor Haugan* Video Editor | Editorial thaugan@bayareanewsgroup.com 510-335-5148 Direct @Tor_H bayareanewsgroup.com *Over 5 million engaged readers weekly*

  • Nicole Siergrist was killed in the Dec. 2, 2016 Ghost...

    Nicole Siergrist was killed in the Dec. 2, 2016 Ghost Ship fire in Oakland. (Facebook)

  • This 2012 photo provided by Terry Ewing shows Ara Jo...

    This 2012 photo provided by Terry Ewing shows Ara Jo in New Orleans. Friends called Jo the most adoptable person ever, a vibrant artist and community organizer who could make friends with anyone, anywhere. Jo, 29, grew up in Los Angeles and was living in Oakland. Authorities notified her family, including her parents who flew in in from South Korea, of her death on Monday, Dec. 5, 2016. Jo was one of dozens of people killed in the fire at the Ghost Ship warehouse fire in Oakland, Calif., that started Dec. 2, 2016. (Terry Ewing via AP)

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David DeBolt, a breaking news editor for the Bay Area News Group, is photographed for a Wordpress profile in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, July 27, 2016. (Anda Chu/Bay Area News Group)
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:

OAKLAND — Breaking a long silence, the reclusive owners of the Ghost Ship warehouse, where 36 people died in a fire, are blaming the tragedy on their electrician, claiming he lied about being a licensed contractor.

Since the Dec. 2, 2016, fire killed 36 partygoers, landlord Chor Ng and her children, property managers Kai and Eva Ng, have refused to give interviews and stayed out of the spotlight. But the elusive landlords told their story for the first time in court documents filed recently in response to a civil lawsuit by the victims’ families, one survivor and residents who lost everything in the blaze.

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Meanwhile, the city of Oakland has appealed to the California State Supreme Court, seeking to overturn Alameda Superior Court Judge Brad Seligman’s ruling that the city had a “mandatory duty” to ensure safety at the Ghost Ship. His ruling leaves Oakland potentially liable for the 36 deaths.

The State Supreme Court has not yet decided whether it will hear the case, but the League of California Cities has filed briefs urging the court to do so.

In the Ngs response to the suit, they also allege master tenant Derick Almena broke his lease by renting space for people to live at the Fruitvale district building, which is zoned only for commercial use. Almena and and co-tenant Max Harris are headed to trial next year, each charged with 36 counts of involuntary manslaughter. The Ngs do not face criminal charges.

But much of the Ngs’ focus in the civil suit is on Benjamin Cannon, who performed electrical work at the Ngs’ buildings. Cannon, 38 of Healdsburg, subleased from the body shop next door to the Ghost Ship to run a “tiny home” business. The Ngs owned Ghost Ship, the body shop, a cell phone store and other businesses around the corner on International Boulevard.

Cannon arrived at Ghost Ship sometime late 2014 with big ideas on how to improve the electrical conditions. The Ngs, in court records, accuse him of fraud.

In March 2017, this newspaper reported that Cannon installed a new transformer in the auto body shop in December 2014 after another transformer caught fire. A $32,808 invoice for the work sent by Cannon to Kai and Eva Ng said the small electrical fire was likely caused by a “catastrophically overloading” power system. Power flowed from the phone store at the corner of International Boulevard and 31st Avenue through the auto body shop and into Ghost Ship.

Ben Cannon, 38, performed unpermitted electrical work on the Ghost Ship warehouse complex of buildings prior to the deadly Dec. 2 fire. (Photo courtesy Oleg Volk) 

Newly filed court records show Cannon billed the Ngs for much more work than previously known. Invoices sent from Cannon to Kai Ng from Jan. 22 to May 5, 2015, total $28,028, according to copies included in the suit. Cannon billed the landlords for another transformer, installation of distribution panels and breakers and work needed for a photography studio.

In an email in January 2015, Cannon communicated with Kai Ng about installing a “cheaper” transformer that “we are going to use it a little bit differently than standard.” It’s unclear if that exact transformer was installed. State records show the contractor license for Cannon’s company, CBC Construction & Engineering Inc., expired in September 2010.

An April 11, 2015, invoice — less than two years before the deadly Ghost Ship fire — said a power outage at the cell phone store was caused by “breakers in old PG&E room that were arcing.” The invoice called for replacing two breakers and other work. The records show Kai Ng approved of and was aware of the work, but the suit claims Cannon misrepresented himself as a certified electrician when he was not. The Ngs deny being “negligent or careless.”

Fire investigators could not determine the exact cause of the December 2016 fire but said it pointed to electrical. So far, Cannon has not cooperated with the civil case.

According to a copy of his Aug. 1 deposition, Cannon took the Fifth Amendment on most of the questions asked of him, including whether he performed electrical work at Ghost Ship and neighboring buildings.

Chris Dolan, who represented the victims’ families at the deposition, said Cannon refused to answer “basic questions such as whether he had been in the Ghost Ship and whether he had a contractor’s license and if and when it was suspended or taken away.”

“It was everything I could do to restrain myself from reaching across the table and shaking the guy because of his smug participation and his apparent disregard of the seriousness of the matter and the lives lost,” Dolan said. “It was as if he was playing some sort of amusing ‘cat-and-mouse’ game.”

Cannon’s attorney, Gregory de la Pena, did not return a call for comment but previously has said he is protecting his client from self incrimination. Attorneys representing the plaintiffs have filed a motion asking Judge Seligman to compel Cannon to answer the questions asked at his deposition. And the attorneys are still waiting on documents — Cannon claims to have 70 terabytes of information relevant to the Ghost Ship case.

Years before he came to 31st Avenue in Oakland, Cannon made a name for himself in the online world of firearm sales and various other ventures, including a purported aerospace company. At age 29 in 2010, he was a founding member of the board of internet-based Calguns Inc., according to records and the Wall Street Journal.

The nonprofit and web forum site catered to younger gun owners. According to the Journal, Cannon “claimed his group was responsible for advancing gun rights in California by discovering an obscure legal path to circumvent the state assault-weapons ban without breaking the law.” He also was the CEO of GUNPAL, Inc., a gun friendlier version of Paypal, according to online records.

Besides fraud, the Ngs are claiming breach of contract against Cannon. According to the Ngs filing, if they are “held liable for any problems stemming from the electrical system at the subject premises, it is because the Cannon cross-defendants materially breached the terms of the contract for the electrical work” by “creating dangerous conditions.”

Defense attorneys representing Almena and Harris have long blamed the Ngs and the city of Oakland for the fire. After a hearing on Monday, Harris’ attorneys said Cannon should share responsibility for the tragedy.

“We are definitely surprised and shocked that he is not being prosecuted criminally,” said attorney Tyler Smith.”It sounds like he and Kai Ng were really the main ones responsible for trying to fix the electrical” issues.