Pubdate: Sun, 07 Oct 2001 Source: Munster Times (IN) Copyright: 2001 The Munster Times Contact: http://www.thetimesonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/832 Source: Munster Times (IN) Author: Bradley Cole Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raves.htm (Raves) HARVEY POLICE SHUT DOWN RAVE HARVEY -- The Harvey Police Department made it clear they are fed up with raves. The city is threatening to pull a local business's license after learning the owner planned to host an illegal rave party for as many as 2,000 youths Saturday night, in a city which officials concede has more than its share of image problems. Shortly before 7 p.m. Saturday, several Harvey police officers barricaded the entrance to Club O, 17034 Halsted St., where an illegal rave party, billed as the Midwest Summer Dance Festival, was to take place, officials said. Armed with a recently approved ordinance banning such events, the police spent the evening turning away more than 80 cars filled with would-be ravers. In one case, a chartered bus bound for the event also was turned away. Officers made scattered arrests and seized small quantities of marijuana, a few Ecstasy pills and several open containers of alcohol, police said. Two of the possession-related arrests included two people from Plymouth and Walkerton, Ind. "We made it pretty clear in our ordinance that this wasn't going to happen," said Harvey police Cmdr. Mike Landini. "I don't think they'll want to come down here and try it again. They can go ... where they like to have these parties, but they are never coming here again." The city of Harvey has had a long history of problems with violence, drugs and crime, said city spokesman Bob Storman. He said many equate Harvey with Calumet City's former "Sin City" reputation. He added that Harvey has a right to maintain civil order and protection its citizens. "If someone got hurt at one of these things, it would be a black eye that this city, which has enough problems, doesn't need," Storman said. "Mayor Graves is trying to clean up this city, and the city has an absolute right to pull the license of a business that doesn't abide by the rules. Storman said police learned of the party after one officer, who was surfing the Internet, saw an advertisement selling $30 tickets to a rave at the club. On Sept. 25, the Harvey City Council passed an ordinance disallowing rave parties in Harvey. The ordinance also banned police from working as private security officers at both rave parties and gentlemen's clubs in the city. While most of the partygoers surprised by the police presence declined to comment on the barricade, one girl, who identified herself only as Melissa, expressed her displeasure at being turned away. "All we wanted to do was have a party," she said. "If I wanted to dance and take drugs, I could have stayed at home." A young man who identified himself as Thomas Kahill passed out fliers with directions to the party's new location -- more than two hours away in Rockford, Ill. When asked what the difference was between a rave and an "all-night dance party," as the event was billed, Kahill said "Basically, just the wording. The word rave party has a lot of bad connotations to it. It's really no different than a rock concert. You bring in musicians, and they play. More people probably get drunk and kill more people driving home from a Grateful Dead or Metallica concert." The flier contained a message to partygoers from Nick Teague, listed as the organizer of the rave, who cited the city's ordinance as the reason for the move. "Due to circumstances beyond our control we were forced to move, bugged-out to a different venue," Teague wrote. "The City of Harvey made an anti-rave law to stop us from doing our event at the Harvey Expo Center ... after trying to fight the ordinance, we realized, that moving the event to a new location would be the best solution." Storman said tickets for the party were being sold at $30 a piece and would have likely generated as much as $100,000 in business. He said not only have rave parties been nationally recognized as a forum for illegal drugs and illicit activities, but the local ordinance makes the parties illegal in Harvey. "This is big business for the people who rent out their buildings to hold these parties and the people who organize them," Storman said. "They don't care what happens to these kids or the people of our community, as long as they get paid." The Harvey City Council plans to discuss the issue at Monday night's council meeting, Storman said. He added that the issue of Club O hosting a Rave party after the city declared it illegal would be brought up, and the city may take measures to pull the business's license. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl