RIP Derek

OCBob

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Hard to believe it's been 5 years little Brother. Sometimes it feels like it just happened yesterday. I miss you, and Scotty and Ryan too.
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Derek B. Johnson, 32; helped children's dreams come true

In the dreamy land of California, Derek B. Johnson once helped an ailing boy meet Shaquille O'Neal and a sick girl visit Disneyland.

A small-town New Jersey boy, Derek divided his time between two coasts, and came to Rhode Island to work for an Internet-security company with a Fortune 500 client list.

But before he moved to West Warwick last year, he helped children with life-threatening diseases live out their fantasies.

"He was a shining star," said Michelle Wells of the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Orange County, in Tustin, Calif.

In less than two years, the 32-year-old volunteer helped the charity grant eight wishes to children -- a significant number, Wells said. Despite the emotional toll of working with children stricken by terrible illnesses, Derek was a tireless worker who got "down on his hands and knees to talk to children," Wells said.

He also sold tickets to the fire department's annual pancake breakfast.

"Derek wanted to help, to give and to serve," Wells said. "Derek was a man of tremendous character."

"He was born that way," says his mother, Patricia, in Anaheim, Calif. "He was the most loving person. He took everything in stride."

Derek's generosity may have been shaped by an early life in Harmony, N.J., a small town near the Pennsylvania border. His father, Robert, was an electronics repairman who eventually opened a shop in Easton.

Derek graduated from Trebas Recording Institute in Hollywood. A movie buff, skydiver and singer, he attended North Hampton Community College in Bethlehem, Pa.

Both Derek and his brother Robert Jr. took jobs with Zoneoftrust, a California Internet-security company.

When the Waltham, Mass.-based Guardent Inc. bought Zoneoftrust, Robert Jr. stayed in California and Derek moved to West Warwick to work in Guardent's Providence office as a security-operations manager.

When Great White appeared at The Station, Derek and four other Guardent employees went to the concert.

Two survived the fire. Derek, Scott Griffith and Ryan Morin did not.

"We're a very close-knit organization," said Jennifer Haas, a spokeswoman for the 140-person company, which held a memorial service for the victims. "It was like losing family members."

Derek, she said, "was one of those managers you rarely come across. He put his team first. And he always had a smile on his face."

Robert Jr., who attended the memorial, agreed.

"He was everybody's best friend. He was my best friend."
 
Resting in peace ---Never forget the loved ones.
 
never forget bro. feeling you sadness all the way down here in Bama. remember the good times you spent together.
 
Thanks guys, it's a shitty day. But more than that, I just wanted to honor Derek a bit here, and let some folks that never met him learn a little about him. He deserved it.
 
Bob,

Sorry to hear.........I had no idea. Glad you posted this up.

My condolences are with you and your family.

I couldn't imagine losing a brother.


Lee
 
The loss of someone so great in your life is horrible. I feel your pain every year it comes up to the date. I miss my father in much the same way. He was a great man as well. August is a tough month for me always. always will be I am afraid. If you need to talk my brother you have my number........Great tribute my friend :rock:
 
just keep faith Bob, no mather how injustice somethings happen, there will be reason , our destiny.We will never understand it ....may someone take your hand right now and guide you trough the good memorys...
 
Bob I cannot believe it has been that long.....I remember all of this when it happened and how messed up you were about it.....I know you loved your brother with all your heart and he knew that as well.....he is watching out for you my friend till you guys are back together.

I wish I could have met him.

Walt
 
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Thank you for sharing a little bit of him to us, all my best.

Will
 
I just found out about this, and thought I would share it.
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[Congressional Record: February 13, 2008 (House)]
[Page H928-H929]
From the Congressional Record Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:cr13fe08-140]




HONORING THE MEMORY OF DEREK BRIAN JOHNSON

The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentleman from Pennsylvania (Mr. Dent) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Mr. DENT. Madam Speaker, I rise today to honor the memory of Derek
Brian Johnson and the efforts of his father, Robert Johnson, a resident
of Easton, Pennsylvania, to seek justice for his son.
Derek Brian Johnson was only 32 when he died. He worked as an
Internet security manager. He enjoyed singing, skydiving and motorcycle
racing. He was passionate in his support of the Make-A-Wish Foundation.
He also loved music and bands. And it was this last love that
ultimately cost him his life.
On February 20, 2003, nearly 5 years ago, Derek went to a club called
The Station in West Warwick, Rhode Island, to hear a band called Great
White. The club was jammed that night with patrons. As the show ensued,
tour manager Daniel Biechele set off a pyrotechnic display that was
part of the band's floor show. The display ignited the building's
soundproofing foam.
The Station went up like kindling. People rushed for the exits, and
panic ensued. Many were crushed as the crowd stampeded to get out of
the burning building. In the end, 100 people died that night at The
Station, including Derek Johnson.
Ultimately Biechele and club owners Jeffrey Derderian and Michael
Derderian were charged with manslaughter as a result of the fire and
ensuing deaths. And there began my constituent, Robert Johnson's, quest
to find justice for his son, a search that from his point of view has
not been at all fruitful.
First, there was the matter of the club itself. There were more
people in the club than there should have been. The Station had no
sprinkler system, which would have prevented, or at least minimized,
the conflagration. And the soundproofing foam was not treated with
flame retardant materials.
Second, there were the court proceedings. Biechele pled guilty to 100
counts of manslaughter. He could have gotten 10 years to serve under a
plea agreement that Bob claims he did not know about. The judge gave
Biechele 15 years but suspended all but 4. Michael Derderian was
allowed to plead no contest to 100 counts of manslaughter pursuant to a
plea agreement. He too only received 4 years to serve.
Finally, there were the parole hearings. Even though both of these
men were responsible for the deaths of 100 people, the State parole
board in Rhode Island has decided to release them.
I have to say that I agree with Bob Johnson when he tells me that
serving less than 4 years after being found legally responsible for so
much carnage hardly seems just. I commend Robert Johnson for the hard
work he has put forth to find justice for his son and for the other victims of
The Station nightclub fire. I know that the memory of Derek Brian Johnson
will live on in his father's heart forever, and I applaud his efforts
to soldier on on behalf of a man who was taken from us all too soon.
 

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