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Raves: 14 Deaths After Insomniac, Go Ventures EDM Parties

Categories: Raves

Thumbnail image for edc 2009 kids Timothy Norris.JPG
Timothy Norris
EDC ravers.
In recent years 14 people have died from overdoses or drug-related incidents after attending raves put on by some of the nation's biggest electronic-music event promoters, Insomniac Events and Go Ventures, both based in L.A.

Most of the deceased were teenagers or twentysomethings attending events that often had the approval of local officials eager to see the economic benefits of thousands of concert-goers coming to town.

That according to the Los Angeles Times over the weekend, which came to some of the same conclusions LA Weekly did a couple years ago:

Namely, in the words of the Times' report ...

... As raves have moved into the mainstream, there have been more tragedies across the country.

That finding is contrary to what local officials, including city Councilman Bernard Parks, argued in defending Insomniac and Go Ventures raves at the L.A. Coliseum -- that putting a once drug-fueled, underground phenomenon out in the open is safer than when they were smaller and unregulated.

But even as major music corporations have elbowed in on this multi-million dollar business, with rumors that Live Nation and other companies were bidding last month for a piece of Insomniac for as much as $100 million, the drugs and drug-related accidents appear to be deadlier than ever.

Thumbnail image for edc dallas girls kevin todora.JPG
Kevin Todora
EDC Dallas.

The Times got details on 14 people who died after attending Insomniac and Go Ventures parties since 2006.

Most involved ecstasy overdoses or drug-related accidents. Some of those stories, including a handful of deaths connected to Electric Daisy Carnival events in L.A., Las Vegas and Dallas, as well as one at 2007's Monster Massive, were reported by the Weekly as well.

In fact, more than two years ago the Weekly filed California Public Records Act requests with the Los Angeles Coliseum Commission. We sought, among other things, its records related to rave deaths since the parties at the Coliseum and sister venue Sports Arena.

We also reminded the commission of our requests more than once. Our inquiries bounced around to different personnel, including the counsel for Los Angeles County government, but the commission never formally responded, which is a violation of the law.

Times reporters dug into coroner's and law enforcement reports from 9 states to come up with its tragic list.

James Penman, the San Bernardino city attorney, told the paper that officials shouldn't let the sometimes millions of dollars that electronic music fans bring to town justify the deadly fallout:

The city should have zero tolerance for any activity where drugs are an integral part. A rave without drugs is like a rodeo without horses. They don't happen.

San Bernardino city officials are considering legal action after Insomniac allegedly refused authorities' requests during one event at the National Orange Show Events Center to turn down its music following complaints from residents who live miles away.

See also:
*Death, Money and Megaraves.

[@dennisjromero / djromero@laweekly.com / @LAWeeklyNews]


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35 comments
nathaliperez06
nathaliperez06

This is why raves should be 21+. Little kids can't handle their shit. Don't blame the promoters. People are, and should be, responsible for their own actions. And someone did make a valid point about how rappers glorify MDMA ( Lil Wayne anyone? ). LA Weekly, you are a disappointment.

firefalcon6424
firefalcon6424

A rave without drugs is like a rodeo without beer. LA times is just trying to get people against the rave scene.  A rave's focus is on the music and coming together as one to enjoy the night. Not get fucked up on drugs. Of course people get fucked up, Alcohol has killed more people than a rave ever will, so fight the real crime...

alexisyque
alexisyque

Why is it that whever these FACTS (check them, they are indeed facts) get brought up, we have a million people springing to the defense of their "scene"?  The facts are there, and while the ratio of deaths to attendees may seem small, the simple fact is that these shows are fueled through the use and abuse of MDMA.  You can say kids are just there for the music, but the reality is quite different.

johnnyblz
johnnyblz

LA Weekly has an article on Raves but it's having a contest to go see Sweedish house Mafia.

andreihp42
andreihp42 topcommenter

@johnnyblz What's your point? LA Weekly is just reporting here, not giving an opinion. 

Ryan Cassidy
Ryan Cassidy like.author.displayName 1 Like

Wow the ignorance on here is astonishing. Brian J. Arra, Rick Gaeta, Robert Quevedo ... Class acts. Bet you all do worse things on a weekly basis than these kids do at raves. "Hand out body bags"? "Ravers are GAY"? Its just amazing how blind you are to the world in front of you.

Brandon Silverman
Brandon Silverman like.author.displayName 1 Like

Super lame article. Only 14 in 6 years?? That's more like an anomaly than a statistic. Where's the story on how many people kill themselves by drinking or are killed by drunk drivers from LA bars? I guarantee its more than 14 in 6 years. But oh, alcohol is legal so it doesn't matter.

djromero
djromero moderator editortopcommenter

@Brandon Silverman Brandon, actually we've covered much in terms of alcohol deaths. So has the Times. You been reading much lately?

andreihp42
andreihp42 topcommenter

@djromero Dude, if you are trying to be a journalist try using proper English and grammar.

brandollars
brandollars like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

@djromero It's sad that you have to moderate your own article. I read plenty, but I usually depend on LA Weekly for funny/weird stories, best places lists and photo galleries. When you post something like this, you embarrass yourselves. 14 deaths in 6 years is an anomaly. 2.333 deaths per year at raves. You have the same chances of being killed by a coconut falling on your head, yet I don't see a story about how Hawaii or other tropical islands aren't controlling their coconuts enough. The point being, this isn't enough to call it the promoters' fault. When will people be held accountable for their own actions? 

djromero
djromero moderator editortopcommenter

@brandollars Thanks for reading us (seriously). Let me make a few points:

I'm not moderating my own article, however sad you think that is. I'm simply point out truths.

We actually do a lot of reporting on stuff that causes death, from alcohol and drugs to a recent cover story on hit-and-run accidents in L.A. Didn't see your comments on those.

It's your opinion that the figure is an "anomaly," but compare it to other kinds of concerts and see how anomalous it is. It starts to stand out.

That, as raves have moved into the mainstream, deaths have become more prominent is "an error" is not the case. I've been covering raves since 1991. There were deaths in the '90s, including a tragic accident in the mountains east of L.A. in 1999. Never, however, have there been these kinds of numbers.

brandollars
brandollars like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

@djromero also "... As raves have moved into the mainstream, there have been more tragedies across the country..." is an error of post hoc ergo propter hoc. The only reason why there have seemingly been "more" tragedies as they've moved into the mainstream is exactly because of that - the more mainstream they are, the more coverage by the national media they're going to get. Flawed, flawed logic.

ryan_cassidy88
ryan_cassidy88 like.author.displayName 1 Like

How about we talk about the fact over 5 million people have attended insomniac events alone in the past 7 years and only 14 have died? For the sake of argument, lets even forget about Go Venture (really easy since they are a fucking joke) and attribute all 14 deaths to insomniac shows ... Thats less than 4% of the ravers attending shows that have died from taking drugs on their own free will. 

Also, wheres the article about all the deaths from shootings in Hollywood outside of clubs? 3 this year already I believe. Wheres the article blaming the companies who own the clubs for not having enough security to not find guns on people they let in? SBE bought that before you could publish it?

Wheres the article where we talk about how rappers are the ones glorifying MDMA use and most Electronic artists shy away from the subject? 

This just shows, like it has in the past, that LA Weekly doesn't have fans of these shows writing articles, they have someone who had to google the term "EDM" just to write it and if that's not the case, you need to re-evaluate your staff. 


djromero
djromero moderator editortopcommenter

@ryan_cassidy88 How are you coming to "over" (more than) 5 million? 

If you've read us you'd know we've covered the Hollywood club shootings quite extensively.

Paul Valerio
Paul Valerio like.author.displayName 1 Like

Slanted coverage. Boo LA Weekly...

Jamee Kerper
Jamee Kerper like.author.displayName 1 Like

I don't do drugs and I love raves. There's a lot more people like me too. In fact, the majority of people aren't on drugs-surprise, surprise.

Angela Bonilla
Angela Bonilla like.author.displayName 1 Like

Why is it the promoters' responsibility at all? I was never allowed to be out all night growing up so if your kids are out doing drugs then that's on you as a parent. If you're an adult then it's your choice. We don't need more B.S. regulations.

djromero
djromero moderator editortopcommenter

@Angela Bonilla (and Ryan, below). My coverage doesn't blame the promoters. It simply points out some startling facts.

Roman Zaytsev
Roman Zaytsev like.author.displayName 1 Like

Statistically, going to a rave is one of the safest things you can do. The number of people who get hurt is incredibly small compared to the number of attendees.

Krak Antek
Krak Antek

And i wonder just how many people have died from Big Pharma in the meantime??

Robert Quevedo
Robert Quevedo

Arrest those who are intoxicated and have their parents pay the bail. The rave industry with dwindle without drugs.

Brian J. Arra
Brian J. Arra

An outlet for stupid people to do drugs. Hand out body bags to attendees.

Sia Abderezai
Sia Abderezai like.author.displayName 1 Like

Here, LET ME DOOOO THE MATH.... More crackdowns and making it harder for dumb kids to "rave" at more "accepted" place, means more and more "underground" raves, where there are less fascilities, and access to paramedical assistance in case some dumbshow doesn't realize what proper hydration or their body intake is. Less access means MORE DEATHS! TA-DA!!!!!!!

Sia Abderezai
Sia Abderezai

Over the span of 6 years. Stop sensationalizing something that will lead to more laws and crackdowns. You don't give a shit about people's lives, you just want more readers.

emberglance
emberglance like.author.displayName 1 Like

How about some more pics of very young girls in bikinis and body paint?  They really help underline the seriousness of the issues under discussion.  

djromero
djromero moderator editortopcommenter

@emberglance That's how people dress. Notice the first photo shows men and women dressed variously. Guess you didn't single that one out.

timemachine
timemachine

@djromero why are there no pictures of people who wear jeans and t-shirts? The photos chosen and language of the article give the average reader a biased look at these events in order to back up claims made by journalists.  Would your article feel different if the photo was two dudes in quicksilver shirts with no wristbands or colored paint?

Alex Starski
Alex Starski

It's unfortunate but they can't prevent people from being stupid.

Dominic Pace
Dominic Pace like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

Wait, it's somebody else who is responsible for what I do to my body? Can I sue them now? I have a lawsuit in with McDonalds bc they made me fat. I'm also suing the Super Bowl Halftime show for being insensitive to the Brazil night club, by using pyrotechnics indoors.. Give me an f'n break.

Ryan Cassidy
Ryan Cassidy

what dont people understand about free will? if there are rules that say no drugs and you take ANY, thats one you. NOT on the promoters. This is just ignorance. perpetuated ignorance.

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