Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Show’s security again a concern in Little Rock

Chief: Police’s letter to venue a ‘slippery slope’

- CHELSEA BOOZER

The Little Rock Police Department is still figuring out how to best monitor possible danger at performanc­es and events in the capital city without discouragi­ng artists and acts from entertaini­ng there, Police Chief Kenton Buckner said.

His comments come after the Police Department sent a second letter this month to a concert venue hosting a hip-hop artist to say that police had knowledge of past violence at the artist’s shows and to express concern over security.

There’s a “slippery slope” to sending such notificati­ons, Buckner said, adding that his department is still learning how to handle being “caught in the middle” of ensuring safety while allowing people to practice their First Amendment rights to perform and attend performanc­es.

In no instance has the Little Rock Police Department demanded the cancellati­on of a show or put pressure on venues to do so, Buckner stressed in a phone interview Thursday, two days after the most recent letter was sent.

The Tuesday letter expressed security concerns about a Sunday meet-andgreet with artist Jacquees at the La’Changes restaurant on West Roosevelt Road. The performer, whose full name is Rodriquez Jacquees Broadnax, is known for his hit song “B.E.D.”

Little Rock’s political figures, on the other hand, have sought the cancellati­on of a recent show.

Two weeks ago, Mayor Mark Stodola and members of the city Board of Directors were shocked after reading a similar concern letter from the police chief about an Oct. 13 performanc­e at iHeart Media Metroplex Live on Colonel Glenn Road by Memphis rapper Moneybagg Yo, whose real name is Demario Dewayne White Jr.

The officials were notified the night before the Moneybagg Yo performanc­e that police knew about gun violence at two of his previous concerts and an instance in New Jersey where his body guards were shot because, according to police, Moneybagg Yo didn’t pay a protection fee to a local gang.

After reading that letter, Stodola and some board members, including at-large Directors Dean Kumpuris and Gene Fortson, said they wanted the concert canceled.

Stodola texted the event venue manager, saying it was irresponsi­ble to bring such an artist to the city in the wake of a mass shooting at a different Memphis rapper’s nightclub performanc­e in July. He also asked the city attorney to seek a court injunction to stop the show, but the venue ended up canceling the show later that night.

The Police Department sent a similarly worded letter Tuesday to La’Changes owner Herbert Broadway about the Jacquees meet-and-greet.

The letter, signed by Assistant Chief Hayward Finks, said the Police Department’s intelligen­ce division had learned of a shooting before a Jacquees concert in February in Iowa. Media reports said the artist did not perform afterward.

The letter also said gang members in Waukegan, Ill., fired shots in July because of Jacquees refusing to pay protection money. No one was injured.

“Due to recent events in Little Rock and throughout the country, it is important that you understand that such events require a significan­t amount of security,” the letter read. It also asked Broadway to contact the Police Department to discuss his security plans.

Reached by phone Thursday, Buckner said the Police Department has made suggestion­s to some concert venues on the number of security guards and off-duty police officers they should employ at events, as well as other security measures they should take, but that it’s up to the venue owners to implement that. He said the Police Department cannot make a club cancel a show or hire more off-duty police.

Buckner said the shooting at the Finesse 2Tymes performanc­e in July at Power Ultra Lounge, in which at least 28 people were injured, caused police to heighten their awareness of potential threats at performanc­es in Little Rock.

The department’s intelligen­ce division searches social media posts and takes tips about events that will draw a crowd and then researches the performers to determine any past violent affiliatio­ns.

“We are still trying to figure out when, where and how we do this practice that we have started,” Buckner said. “An intelligen­t person could raise the question — you are going to do this for this concert venue, but we’ve had incidents at different things in Little Rock. We’ve had shootings after the fair, after Movies in the Park. How do we consistent­ly and fairly apply our attempt to protect the public without harming those who have a right to do what they’re doing?”

When the Moneybagg Yo concert was canceled earlier this month, people in social media posts and in the comment section of online news articles criticized elected officials’ efforts to get it shut down.

Banker and pastor Frank Scott Jr., who is exploring a run for mayor in next year’s election, issued a news release expressing frustratio­n at Stodola’s effort to shut down the show.

“I really look forward to a Little Rock that lives up to its potential. A city where its residents don’t have to choose between enjoying entertainm­ent and public safety, a city where individual rights and property rights harmonious­ly coexist,” Scott said.

“I am hopeful that a city with as much potential as Little Rock will never have to choose which venue to keep safe and which venue to close, because all of our citizens deserve safety, and all of our businesses deserve an opportunit­y for a free enterprise environmen­t,” the statement continued.

Stodola responded at the time saying Scott was “naive” and didn’t understand elected officials’ responsibi­lity to keep the public safe.

He said Thursday in response to some criticism of his previous efforts that he and the city board were given damaging informatio­n at the last minute, and they had little time to determine security measures before the Moneybagg Yo performanc­e was to take place.

He also said their mindset was in the context of the July shooting. Finesse 2Tymes, whose real name is Ricky Hampton, had been accused of shooting someone in Forrest City after a concert there the week before his performanc­e in Little Rock.

“People in the community were shocked there was not more advanced knowledge that this performer was going to be in Little Rock, and it really had to do with the fliers that had been put out where he’s holding a semiautoma­tic machine gun,” Stodola said. “How come police didn’t know about this? Who was doing the checking? … Any kind of large group gathering where you see there are elements that could turn into some kind of big violent act, it’s appropriat­e for the police chief to at least do a review.”

Some people have suggested in online comments that there were racial motivation­s behind the Police Department’s security concerns, noting that the city has expressed concern only about hip-hop acts. Stodola said that’s offbase.

“It has nothing to do with the genre of music,” he said.

Buckner said Thursday that the Moneybagg Yo concert and Jacquees’ meet-andgreet are the only two events for which the department has sent letters about security concerns, so far.

He said police find themselves “smack dab in the middle” of a responsibi­lity to protect people while also ensuring individual­s are allowed to practice their legal rights to perform and gather.

“Just because John Doe doesn’t like a specific genre of music doesn’t mean the police have the right to say these individual­s can’t perform in our city, which is why our security suggestion­s are merely suggestion­s. In no way, shape or form are we trying to target one genre of music. That would be very foolish and narrow-minded on our part,” Buckner said.

The officials were notified the night before the Moneybagg Yo performanc­e that police knew about gun violence at two of his previous concerts ...

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