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ACLU Joins Lawsuit Challenging Raids of Concerts
and Violation of Free Speech
Utah Court’s Ruling Upholding Use of 12-Hour
Ordinance is Disappointing, Says ACLU
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 26, 2005
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SALT LAKE CITY -- The American Civil Liberties Union announced today that
it would join a lawsuit challenging law enforcement raids of electronic
music concerts. The suit charges local law enforcement engaged in widespread
violations of the constitutional rights of concert promoters and venue
owners during concerts on July 16 and August 20.
The ACLU also expressed disappointment with last Thursday’s ruling
by United States District Judge Dale Kimball to deny a motion that would
have temporarily barred law enforcement from imposing its own interpretation
of a Utah County ordinance requiring permits for mass gatherings lasting
more than 12 hours. The ACLU is concerned that law enforcement’s
interpretation of the ordinance is a pretext for eliminating electronic
music concerts altogether.
“Utah County’s actions strike at the heart of First Amendment
freedoms,” said ACLU of Utah attorney Margaret Plane. “The
ACLU is joining this fight to help protect our fundamental rights from
this kind of unjust law enforcement action.”
During the August 20 concert, battle-ready Utah County law enforcement
officers, accompanied by police dogs and a helicopter, stormed concertgoers
and threatened some with arrest. Both concerts took place in Spanish
Fork Canyon – an area south of Provo, Utah. The owners of the
350-acre ranch, which has hosted several concerts over the last three
summers, were also ordered off the land. Police did not have warrants
to enter the land or to search concertgoers at either event. The raid
on August 20 was recorded on a video, which has since been widely disseminated.
“It was like a war zone. I’ve never seen anything like
it,” said one of the concert promoters, Brandon Fullmer. “Although
I plan to organize more concerts, I know lots of people would be afraid
to come because of the police raid and, honestly, I am afraid too.”
Utah County Sheriff James Tracy, one of several defendants in the suit,
authorized and implemented the August 20 raid based largely on the presumption
that the concert would continue beyond the 12 hours for which promoters
had secured necessary permits. The police entries, however, occurred
only two to three hours into each concert. In fact, the concert was
not scheduled to run beyond 12 hours, nor were any event staff contracted
to work beyond 12 hours. The promoters, additionally, had assured the
property’s owners in advance that the concert would not last 12
hours.
At no point did police ask the promoters or property owners how long
the August 20 concert would run, nor did they request the acquisition
of further permits. While police claim to have conducted a handful of
undercover drug buys at the event, these did not, according to the lawsuit,
justify the termination of the concert and forceful dispersal of the
roughly 700 people in attendance.
“The sheriff misinterpreted and wrongly applied an overly vague
ordinance, which unfortunately, remains intact,” said ACLU cooperating
attorney Brian M. Barnard. “No promoter or venue can successfully
put on concerts if they never know when or why the cops will end an
event.”
The case is UpRock v. Tracy. In addition to Sheriff Tracy, the defendants
in the current case are Lt. Grant Ferre of the Utah Sheriff Department,
Utah County Attorney Kay Bryson, Utah County Commission Chair Jerry
Grover, Utah County Commissioner Steve White, Utah County Commission
Vice Chair Larry Ellerton and Utah County itself. The case was filed
on behalf of promoters Fullmer and Nick Mari and landowners the Childs’
Family Trust.
Video of the August 20 raid may be viewed online at:
http://stream.realimpact.net/?file=clients/aclu/Rave_Police_Raid.wmv&type=wmv
The complaint in the case is available at:
http://www.acluutah.org/uprockcomplaint.pdf
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