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From sobbing outbursts to 'staredowns,' key moments of George Pino trial

Kairi Lowery and Grethel Aguila, Miami Herald on

Published in News & Features

The trial of Doral real estate broker George Pino, who was piloting the boat that slammed into a channel marker in Biscayne Bay, killing a 17-year-old girl, has been marked by eight days of difficult-to-listen testimony, emotional outbursts and more than one tense moment between Pino and the prosecutor.

Prosecutors and Pino’s defense attorneys will deliver their final arguments to the jury on Monday morning. The six-person jury, made up of five men and one woman, will then decide whether Pino, 54, is guilty of manslaughter and vessel homicide charges stemming from his Sept. 4, 2022, boat crash.

Luciana “Lucy” Fernandez, 17, was killed and Katerina “Katy” Puig, now 21, was left with life-altering physical and neurological disabilities.

The crash happened around 6 p.m. on the Sunday of Labor Day weekend in 2022. Pino was taking his wife, Cecilia, their daughter Cecilia and 11 of her friends back to the Ocean Reef Club in north Key Largo after an outing on Elliott Key to celebrate his daughter’s upcoming 18th birthday. They were planning to go dinner that night at the club with the girls.

Here’s a look at noteworthy moments during the trial:

Pino breaks down, pausing opening statements

On Day 1 of the trial, Monday, June 8, Pino garnered national attention when he sobbed and breathed heavily about an hour into opening statements. Miami-Dade Circuit Court Judge Marisa Tinkler Mendez sent the jury out of the courtroom and subsequently paused proceedings.

Pino started breaking down just minutes after lead prosecutor Laura Adams finished her statement, where she laid out how Pino plowed his 29-foot Robalo into the steel channel marker on that clear and calm early summer evening.

Videos of Pino’s courtroom breakdown went viral on social media, with some users ridiculing his outburst.

As Pino sobbed, family members of Lucy Fernandez squeezed into the wood courtroom pews behind Adams while Pino’s supporters sat behind him. Several of Pino’s loved ones consoled him as he broke down.

Later on during the trial, the judge reprimanded Pino and his supporters for hugging and physical embracing him while court was in session and the jury was present.

“This is absolutely unacceptable,” Judge Tinkler Mendez said. “This is a court of law. We’re not at a sporting event. We’re not at a social event.”

The trial continued the day after the outburst, with defense attorney Howard Srebnick delivering his opening statement.

Girls on the boat tell their stories

In several days of testimony, jurors heard from four of the teenage girls who were on the boat when it crashed. Camila Alvarez and Carolina Monterrey, now 21, testified for the prosecution. Natalia Reed and Claudia Portocarrero, also 21, testified on behalf of the defense.

The girls admitted that they had consumed alcoholic beverages that were stashed in a cooler on the boat, despite being under the legal drinking age of 21. All four girls said they felt buzzed after drinking that day. The girls on the boat were 17 or younger at the time of the crash.

While testifying, Alvarez said she had 10 hard lemonade seltzers. Monterrey was the only girl who said she saw Pino drinking while at the sandbar at Elliott Key. Pino admitted to a Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission investigator that he drank “two beers” that day.

The boat was later found to contain 61 empty and partially empty booze bottles and cans, after FWC officers pulled the boat from the bay a day after the crash. Pino’s attorneys have said the empty bottles and cans came from boats tied up at the sandbar with them.

The girls, many of whom said they were avid boaters, testified that they felt safe when Pino was operating the vessel before the crash.

“It felt like nothing out of the ordinary,” said Portocarrero, who is a cousin to the Pinos.

Jury sees wrecked boat, crash re-enactment

On the fourth day of trial, the jury hopped into a black Dodge van escorted by Miami-Dade Sheriff’s Office deputies. The jurors traveled up to the FWC’s storage lot in North Miami, where they got to see Pino’s wrecked boat for themselves.

The group spent about half an hour at the site, where they could tour and inspect the vessel.

 

Back in the courtroom, jurors also saw drone footage shot a year ago by Miami-Dade Sheriff’s Office crime-scene detectives when they recreated the maritime route of Pino’s boat as it traveled back through Cutter Bank in Biscayne Bay.

The footage, which captured a FWC boat traveling around the same speed as Pino’s at the time of the crash, was meant to show Pino had an unobstructed path on the waterway during the nine seconds before he slammed into Channel Marker 15, the last marker before getting to the docks at Ocean Reef.

Pino had previously said he had swerved his vessel to the right to avoid the wake of another boat. No witness, including the passengers on Pino’s Robalo or in other boats behind him, saw what Adams has called the “phantom boat.” GPS data indicated that Pino did not swerve before hitting the marker.

Jurors were later shown several perspectives of the crash re-enactment as law enforcement placed cameras on the Robalo’s windshield, the boat’s starboard, or right side, and on the channel marker. A boat crash expert testified that in the nine seconds leading up to the crash, Pino traveled the length of two football fields while going 47 mph.

The drone’s operator, Detective Bengal Dow, testified the channel marker was not hard to see. However, Srebnick refuted the footage and said Pino was not “hot dogging,” as the FWC boat was not depicted as operating in unsafe waters.

From the other cameras’ perspectives, the steel marker was in plain view, and the vessel was seen barreling straight toward the marker.

Pino and the prosecutor

At the end of the first week after jurors were sent home, Adams told the judge she overheard Pino mumbling from his seat while she was discussing the crash with a witness on the stand — and said she was worried jurors may have heard it.

While the judge spoke to Adams about her concerns, Laura snapped at Pino and said, “Excuse me, do you have something you want to say to me? Why are you staring at me?”

“I’m staring out there,” Pino responded. “I don’t want to say anything to you.”

Afterward, Pino was exiting when his family and friends began to separate him from an oncoming crowd of Lucy's loved ones. Some of them yelled, “George, sit down!”

On Wednesday, the last day of testimony, attorney Jeanelle Gomez, on the legal team defending Pino, aired out a similar issue, saying Pino and Adams were engaged in a “staredown.”

Lucy’s injuries detailed

Lucy’s official cause of death was drowning, said Dr. David Fintan Garavan, formerly with the Miami-Dade Medical Examiner’s Office. But the girl, who had just entered her senior year at Our Lady of Lourdes Academy, also suffered significant blunt force trauma from the impact of the boat crashing into the steel channel marker, he noted.

Lucy had cuts and bruises to her head, face, arms, legs and back, Fintan Garavan testified. Doctors found bruising on the inside of her mouth, including on her tongue and gums. Lucy was also hemorrhaging from her ears and nose. Her body was swollen from fluid seeping into all of her tissues, he added.

The doctor said Lucy’s injuries were consistent with her being thrown from the boat at high speed and hitting an object with great force. She also had significant injuries from first responders’ intense and rapid attempts at keeping her alive with CPR.

Fintan Garavan said the crash’s impact likely rendered Lucy unconscious, leading her to being trapped underneath Pino’s boat, where she was unable to breathe. The boat capsized after the crash, throwing all into the bay.

On the stand, Lucy’s father Andres Fernandez recounted seeing his daughter in the hospital room, where he and his wife Melissa Fernandez discovered “every parent’s worst nightmare.” Lucy died at 6 a.m. the day after the crash.

Fernandez said he and Melissa saw something by their daughter’s head. It turned out to be a piece of fiberglass from Pino’s boat. They tried to remove it, he said, and were told by a police officer to leave it because it was evidence.

“At that point, Meli and I looked at each other and said, ‘Our daughter is a piece of evidence,’” Fernandez, in tears, testified.

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