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#TAO: Not All IDs Were Checked At L.A. New Year's Eve Rave Despite Orders From Officials; 33 Mostly Drug-Related Arrests Made At Party

Categories: Raves

Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for tao edc rave crowd Caesar Sebastian.JPG
Caesar Sebastian / Insomniac Events
Together As One 2010.
After months of deliberation, criticism and debate, the officials who run the Coliseum and Sports Arena allowed controversial raves at the venues to go forward, but with strict new guidelines: That each person entering is at least 18, and that each one goes through a scan-based ID check to make sure.

At the first rave to happen under the new rules, approved in November and reaffirmed in December, the system broke down. People got through at New Year's Eve's "Together As One" party at the Sports Arena without having their identifies verified for age, Los Angeles police Deputy Chief Patrick Gannon told the Weekly.

However (and this is a BIG however) ...

Gannon says only people who appeared to be way older 18 were allowed to bypass the ID scanners.

Additionally, he revised the previous number of arrests from 25 to 33, including 12 felony arrests. Almost all if not all were drug-related, he said.

This all happened Friday night/Saturday morning as larger-than-expected crowds showed up -- 45,600 in the LAPD's official estimate -- overwhelming workers at the gate and creating backups.

tao insomniac events caesar sebastian.JPG
Caesar Sebastian / Insomniac Events
Hot chicks kiss at Together As One.

Additionally, he said, some of the ID scanners broke down, contributing to the problem. Gannon gave us these details after the Weekly, having received a report of some IDs not being checked at the event, asked him if the observation was true.

Gannon says he believes that long lines and huge backups have been major factors in gatecrashing at past events. So older-looking folks were let in quickly to relieve the stress. But, he emphasized, no one entered without being searched or having their bags searched.

"Some people who were obviously not underage, we allowed them to skip the license readers," he said.

If this is how it went, it doesn't bode well for ensuring that IDs are checked at future events. After all, TAO, with 45,600 people, is a fraction of the size of June's Electric Daisy Carnival, which police said drew 160,000 people over two days in June.

When the Coliseum Commission, the public body that runs the Coliseum and Sports Arena, allowed raves to continue on at the venues in November as part of a controversial, low-profile vote that took many observers by surprise, it adopted not-yet-final recommendations of a rave task force that included a strict, ID-scan policy, a hard-and-fast 18-and-older rule, more security, and more medical personnel.

That last caveat was meant to reduce the number of overdoses. But the event saw 17 hospitalizations and 62 medical emergencies. Last year's TAO saw 18 hospitalizations, mostly for ecstasy overdoses.

That number "is still remarkably high and I think we still have to do a lot more work on ensuring that if they continue to do these types of events that we do more on the prevent this," Gannon said.

At a similarly sized Halloween rave at the Sports Arena in October 40 arrests were reported along with 16 hospitalizations.

Despite efforts to "reduce harm" caused by ecstasy overdoses at the events, the numbers seem consistent.

The Deputy Chief said the event included "amnesty boxes" where ravers could dump drugs on the way into the event. But he said he didn't know how many drugs were deposited: The promoters were in charge of hiring an independent organization to set up the amnesty boxes, and police kept their distance because they would be obligated to arrest anyone who had narcotics.

He said there was no gatecrashing that he knew of, and only a few minor "scuffles."

Gannon emphasized that he believes things have improved compared to earlier events, particularly the much larger Electric Daisy Carnival in June that saw more than 200 medical emergencies, 60 arrests and the death of one attendee, a 15-year-old who had taken ecstasy.

Her demise led to serious questions about the wisdom of holding raves at the public venues.

"All of the changes" ordered by the Commission, he said, "have been positive."

My Voice Nation Help
6 comments
-_-
-_-

Obviously conditions at these events have improved, so stop wasting your time writing about electronic dance music events.

commonsense
commonsense

ITS REALLY SIMPLE... IF U WANT KIDS TO STOP GOING TO THE HOSPITAL... GIVE OUT FREEEEEEE WATER AND I GUARANTEE THAT NUMBER WILL GO DOWN..i go to these raves and all insomnian and go ventures and fresh events and whoever care about is money... they say they care about the health and safety of the customers but all they care about is not looking bad in the public eye and making more money..

water bottles at 4 dollars a piece??? what 18 yr old is gunna pay for that...

being dehydrated is the number one reason people go to the hospital cuz everyone is rolling and dancing for 12 + hours with no water???

wouldn't u be thirsty

Free water will save lives!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Aaron Loomis
Aaron Loomis

Totally agree. Deaths on ecstasy are due to a combination of three things:

1. Victim drinks to much water and drowns his/her brain2.Victim becomes too dehydrated due to 12+ hours of exercise with minimal consumption of water3. Excessive consumption of alcohol is deadly when combined with ecstasy, victim dies due to excessive consumption of alcohol while on the drug

La626
La626

Wow, I'm so offended, now I know why my I.D. wasn't checked and it's because I look like my age 28 =(Thank you for another article on "MegaRaves" but where does this put us the EDM Club Goers, who attend these events with much enthusiasm as the younger folks, and for the music? Stop calling these festivals Raves, I'm not juvenile were I attend these concert-festivals for extacy.By the way, you need to write in FULL about your references featured in your crappy video. The hippie-ass BURNERS, which is a sad scene, (children under the age of 13, so rounded by adults on acid and tripping on crappy acid "art" with loud shitty psychedelic trance music), is not a counter part of Electronic Dance Music concert Festivals. They have no clear message in debating "megaRaves" as they are biased against the modern concert goer like myself, whom would rather have a beer with a slice of pizza (Churro's too) and enjoy full on epic trance and electro music at an Insomniac Festival or club, then to drop acid, bang on a drum and run around holding hands with burners. This is the end of my rant about these continuing articles of "MegaRaves". I'm going to eat my egg's with bacon now.

Aaron Loomis
Aaron Loomis

I agree, I go to these events here in Denver. I prefer to call them EDM festivals or concerts because I go to enjoy the music. Edm is my favorite genre of music and I only go to events like this if their lineup is good.

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