Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Miami imposes curfew to prevent crime

- DAVID FISCHER AND CURT ANDERSON Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Freida Frisaro of The Associated Press.

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — For the third year in a row, Miami Beach finds itself struggling with spring break violence, including two fatal shootings and unruly crowds, despite a gigantic police presence and activities designed to give people alternativ­es to drinking alcohol and roaming the streets.

The party-all-the-time vibe in the South Beach section of the popular barrier island city has already led officials to ban alcohol sales at larger clubs after 2 a.m. Police are stationed everywhere, including in mobile towers that give officers a bird’s-eye view of the streets. Art, music, yoga and volleyball tournament­s were added this year to give people something to do, at least during the day.

Yet the violence and street chaos continues at night. All night.

The city imposed an overnight curfew that ended Monday morning but decided at a City Commission meeting not to enact a second curfew next weekend, when the Ultra Music Festival will draw thousands of people to South Beach. It’s the third weekend of spring break when the worst chaos occurs, Commission­er Kristen Rosen Gonzalez said.

“Ultra weekend is not the problem,” she said.

Commission­er Ricky Arriola agreed, saying there may need to be metal detectors, security fences or other measures installed next year in certain sections of Miami Beach. He noted that dozens of businesses and their workers depend on the crowds the Ultra event bring in.

“A curfew is not a longterm solution,” he said. “We’re taking it out on law-abiding businesses.”

The panel did decide, as it did last year, to force liquor stores in the South Beach area to close early, at 6 p.m., next weekend. Officials did point out that the city manager still has emergency authority to order a 72-hour curfew despite the commission’s reluctance.

Mayor Dan Gelber wants the violence and disorder to stop.

“The volume of people in our city, the unruly nature of too many and the presence of guns has created a peril that cannot go unchecked,” Gelber said in a video statement issued Sunday. “It is clear that even an unpreceden­ted police presence could not prevent these incidents from occurring.”

Gelber added: “We don’t ask for spring break in our city. We don’t want spring break in our city.”

Miami Beach police reported at least 322 arrests on a variety of charges between Feb. 27 and Sunday. Gelber said more than 70 firearms were confiscate­d in that time. This has been happening despite police officers working up to 14-hour shifts six days a week, according to a city emergency declaratio­n.

The latest shooting happened around 3:30 a.m. Sunday on Ocean Drive in South Beach, police said. A male was shot and died later at a hospital and officers chased down a suspect on foot, police said on Twitter. Their identities were not released, nor were any possible charges.

Grainy security footage being shared on social media shows a man pulling a gun from under his T-shirt and firing multiple shots and striking another man as crowds quickly scattered.

On Friday night, one male victim was killed and another was seriously injured in a shooting that sent panicked crowds scrambling from restaurant­s and clubs into the streets. Police detained one person at the scene and found four firearms, but no other details have been made available.

Under the now-expired curfew, people had to leave businesses before midnight, although hotels can operate later only in service to their guests. Restaurant­s could stay open only for delivery and the curfew won’t apply to residents, people going to and from work, emergency services and hotel guests. Some roads will be closed off and arriving hotel guests may have to show proof of their reservatio­ns.

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