Daniel Cicciaro Sr. said Thursday that his angry courthouse outburst the day before "obviously wasn't a death threat" aimed at Aaron White, the son of the man convicted of killing Cicciaro's son in a 2006 confrontation outside the Whites' home in Miller Place.
"Now they're saying I threatened him," Cicciaro said after emerging from his house in Port Jefferson Station shortly before noon. "It's amazing how they turned it [John White's trial] into race, and now they're trying to say I threatened him [Aaron White]. It's ridiculous."
He went on to say, "I was just reiterating that what if the tables were turned, how would this have unfolded?"
On Wednesday, the elder Cicciaro erupted in the Riverhead courthouse after John White, who is African-American, was sentenced to 2 to 4 years in prison for the shooting death of Daniel Cicciaro Jr., 17, who was white.
On that night in August 2006, the younger Cicciaro and four other teens had come to the Whites' home to confront Aaron White. John White, who said he believed he and his family were in danger, said the gun went off accidentally when Cicciaro Jr. lunged for it.
Wednesday, during a tirade before the scrum of reporters and television cameras in the Riverhead courthouse, Daniel Cicciaro Sr. shouted, "Let's see what happens when Aaron White gets shot." Afterward, Suffolk District Attorney Thomas Spota informed both Suffolk County police and the Southampton Police Department, which has jurisdiction over the courthouse, about the comment.
Suffolk police stationed an officer outside the Whites' home in Miller Place, and that police presence remained on Thursday.
In his comments to reporters Thursday, a noticeably calmer Cicciaro also addressed the possibility that John White could be released from jail on $200,000 cash bail as early as Thursday. A Brooklyn appellate court ruled Wednesday that White could remain free pending the appeal of his December conviction for second-degree manslaughter and third-degree criminal possession of a weapon.
"After what happened in the courtroom yesterday, I wouldn't put it past him. We kind of expected another bombshell like that," Cicciaro said.
"What they should do is give him all his bail money back, don't give him any jail time, let him go, give him his passport back, let him enjoy life," he continued, his tone laden with sarcasm.
http://www.newsday.com/news/local/suffolk/ny-liwhite0321,0,1563785.story