Pubdate: Thu, 01 Mar 2001 Source: Fort Worth Weekly (TX) Copyright: 2001 New Times, Inc. Contact: 1204-B W. 7th St. Suite 201, Fort Worth, TX 76102 Feedback: http://www.fwweekly.com/letters/ Website: http://www.fwweekly.com/ Forum: http://www.fwweekly.com/discussions/ Author: Colin Maycock and Carey Hix Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raves.htm (Raves) COPS PUT THE SQUEEZE ON RIDGLEA The State Helps FWPD Send Raves Back Underground. In a move reminiscent of religious leaders burning Beatles albums in the wake of John Lennon's renowned "We're more famous than Jesus" comment, the Fort Worth Police Department and the State Attorney General's Office have decided that raves are no longer welcome here. The police and representatives of the AG's office met with Ridglea Theater owner Richard Van Zandt just under two weeks ago and told him that should one more rave occur in the theater -- or more precisely, should one more citation be issued during a party -- the business would be closed under the terms provided by the Nuisance Abatement law, a tactic used last year in Orlando, Fla., to pressure some of that city's dance clubs. "Dance music represents good things." dark-haired, slight raver Bo Barnett said. "It talks about how beautiful everybody is, about dancing all night, about loving everybody, about getting your groove on," he said after a rave earlier this year. "That's what the whole scene stands for. The word 'rave' doesn't mean a drug-induced party where a bunch of kids gather together and get fucked up. That's not what it's about." The Fort Worth Police Department is convinced otherwise. It contends not only that illegal drug use is rampant at these parties, but that raves are the perfect cover for distribution. After 12 arrests were made at the Ridglea by an undercover unit of the Narcotics Division during a December 10 rave, police revoked the theater's authorization to employ off-duty officers and strongly suggested that Van Zandt consider canceling future raves. Van Zandt decided not to fight for the kids' right to party. "I have done battles in the past. I have taken a fire chief to court in his own city hall, and I beat him," Van Zandt said. "There were some issues in the military that I took on because I knew that I was right. This, however, is not a battle that I choose to fight with the police department because I don't think it will benefit the Ridglea. I don't think it will benefit Wesley [Hathaway, Van Zandt's partner] and I personally or professionally." Unfortunately for the area's scenesters, narcotics officers collared another 10 people at a subsequent rave in the new year. That's when the AG's office was called in. The office's spokesperson, Tom Kelley, said that given the number of citations already issued, they were prepared to close the Ridglea unless Van Zandt was willing to cooperate. FWPD claims they are not opposed to raves per se, merely the criminal elements that accompany them. "We focused on the activity, not simply because it was a rave," Capt. Clifford Cook of the West Division said. Twenty-two arrests over two nights from an audience of at least 2,600 people equals less than 1 percent of the crowd. Rave promoter Dave Skinner of All 4 One Productions said that he was "saddened by the loss of an outstanding venue," and noted that one of the attractions of the Ridglea was that it "was guaranteed to be a safe place for kids." Since the National Institute on Drug Abuse issued last summer's "Drug Alert Bulletin" on ecstasy and other club drugs such as ketamine and GHB, different local authorities have made efforts to contain or suppress raves. Cities as disparate as New Orleans and Des Moines have, since the beginning of January, launched initiatives to eliminate or radically curtail their rave scenes. New Orleans authorities, for example, have reinterpreted mid-'80s crack-house laws, which make it a crime to make a building available for drug use, to indict the owners and promoters of the State Palace club over the hosting of a rave. Long before the Ridglea Theater started scheduling raves in 1998, the local dance scene was well entrenched. The first Fort Worth raves took place in 1994 shortly after Matt Pruitt of Tech Sun Records met D.J. Carl Howard, a member of Anomaly, the city's first party crew. "Anomaly was responsible for Fort Worth's first renegade rave parties that were held in such exotic locations as empty warehouses and abandoned cul-de-sacs," Pruitt said. In those days, if 600 people showed up and paid the $7 admission charge, the event was a success. As the popularity of Anomaly's parties grew, the promoters became increasingly ambitious. Hagize, Anomaly's primary agent, organized a party in an abandoned mattress warehouse off Vickery Boulevard. That event, which Juan Atkins headlined, marked the first organized sting by the police on a local rave, Pruitt said. The police operation was primarily one of harassment. Minutes before the party was to begin, the police surrounded the entire block, began arresting party goers, and handed Hagize several tickets. The bust put an end to Anomaly, Pruitt said. Only momentarily silenced, the electronic beat surfaced shortly afterwards, according to Pruitt, in an abandoned Haltom City warehouse where 800 people congregated to hear the musical machinations of the popular D.J. Icey. Five minutes into Icey's set, which was encased in total darkness save for two small red and green lasers suspended from the ceiling, the police raided. Apparently the police were a little nonplussed by the event. "They had just run up on an abandoned warehouse with over 800 kids dancing to weird music on an incredibly loud sound system in complete darkness," Pruitt recalled. "This was virgin territory for the boys in blue." Despite the attentions of the city's finest, the tenants of the warehouse, along with Pruitt, began hosting events that were to become the quasi-mystical legends of the local scene: the Big House and Haltom City Warehouse parties. These functions were the starting point for many of Fort Worth's most prominent d.j.'s, such as Pruitt, Joel Alamo, D.J. Love, U-Chin, Waric Cameron, and Frankie Vega. In late 1996 and early 1997, clubs began recognizing the commercial potential of electronic music and started to hire d.j.'s to play for the crowds who had tired of the legal difficulties associated with the warehouse renegades. From 1997 to 1999 people flocked to places such as 8.0, Underground X, and the Aqua Bar. Raving at the Ridglea began in the late '90s, when a collective called Zedan Productions began organizing large events there. In June 1999, Disco Agent's John Phunk (a.k.a. John Peacock) started a series of raves known as the "Funktown parties," which attracted more than 700 people. After the Dallas club Decibel closed in winter 2000, the Ridglea Theater emerged as the premier site for raves.Just because the police are cracking down now doesn't mean the raves will cease, Phunk said. "They will continue on in some form here in the Fort Worth scene, albeit underground again, like in the beginning," he said. "Some rave-scene members actually embrace the thought of it going back underground. That way it can recapture some of its lost luster and magic."It might seem ironic that the Fort Worth Police are suppressing a scene that had been making extensive efforts recently to police itself. The drug usage is not as rampant as it once was, Phunk said. "There is a sober revolution going on now that is putting the drug abusers in the minority, where they belong," he said. Van Zandt, on the other hand, cannot afford to be quite as sanguine as either the police or the ravers. The loss of the revenue generated by the raves, between $10,000 and $20,000 a month, puts the future of the theater in jeopardy. He pondered the future of his business. "One area that is out there that we really have not tapped in to," he said, "is corporate events." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake