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News (Media Awareness Project) - US WI: Partygoers, Organizers Say Police Overreacted With Mass Citations
Title:US WI: Partygoers, Organizers Say Police Overreacted With Mass Citations
Published On:2002-11-05
Source:Racine Journal Times, The (WI)
Fetched On:2008-01-21 20:25:26
PARTYGOERS, ORGANIZERS SAY POLICE OVERREACTED WITH MASS CITATIONS

RACINE -- Laser lights flashed through the air and hundreds of young people
gyrated to the throbbing beat pumped out by 16 DJs at the Tradewinds
Village. The party had been going on for close to three hours when, Racine
police said, Ryan Keller walked up to two undercover officers and asked if
they wanted "something."

Keller told them he had "K" or "X" -- street slang for the drugs Ketamine
and Ecstasy -- and they could have some too, for a price.

Keller, 21, from Bartlett, Ill., sold the officers a bag of what he said
was Ketamine for $20. Less than a half-hour later, between 20 and 25
uniformed Racine police officers moved into the building at 1518 Washington
Ave. They arrested Keller and two other people on drug charges, and shut
the party down. Police issued a total of 445 citations, for almost $1,000
each, charging everybody there with being patrons of a disorderly house.

Four other people were cited for running a disorderly house, said Sgt.
William Macemon, a Racine police spokesman.

For police, they had broken up a textbook example of a rave -- a party
known for its loud music, frenetic dancing and sometimes unabashed drug
use. For partygoers, it was an example of police excess.

For Gary Thompson, executive director of the Uptown Theater Group, which
organized the party, it was a disaster.

"Our organization's name is completely ruined," he said. "Tradewinds' name
is completely ruined."

Thompson said he has contacted the American Civil Liberties Union about
helping the Uptown Theater Group and the partygoers who were cited.

Thompson said he and the Uptown Theater Group had planned the party for
weeks, distributing fliers, advertising it on their Web site
(thehauntedtheater.com) and even sending out press releases.

On Friday, police called the Uptown Theater Group to tell them they could
not have the party at the theater, as planned. They scrambled to find a new
place.

They found Tradewinds Village, just down the street.

Police were led to the party by a tip from the U.S. Customs Service.
Macemon would not say what the tip was. He didn't know when police received it.

Thompson and partygoers were angered at what they said was police
overreaction. Although only three people, out of close to 450, were
arrested for having or selling drugs, everyone was cited for it.

"To blame our organization, to blame our event, to blame 445 other people
in there, for the three bad apples, it's just disgusting," Thompson said.

Macemon said the disorderly house citations stemmed from the drug use. The
ordinance applies to any party that is disruptive or violates city
ordinances or state laws. In this case, undercover police officers saw
other examples of drug activity beyond the three men arrested, although
Macemon couldn't say how prevalent drugs were.

According to the disorderly house ordinance, people who are reasonably
aware of drug use should leave, Macemon said. Those who don't could be cited.

Laura Daluga, 18, and James Werdeniuk, 22, came up from the Chicago suburbs
to go the party. They arrived around midnight. Neither one saw anybody
using or selling drugs, but they were cited like everyone else.

"I tried telling them, I've been at this event only 15 minutes, there's no
way I could've known any of this was going on," Werdeniuk said.

Both Daluga and Werdeniuk volunteer for an organization called DanceSafe,
which tries to educate people at raves and nightclubs about drug abuse.
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