San Diego Union-Tribune

San Diego strip club ordered to cease and desist.

Directive comes days after Padres outfielder was stabbed outside

- BY PAUL SISSON paul.sisson@sduniontri­bune.com

Three days after Padres outfielder Tommy Pham suffered a stab wound outside a Midway District strip club, the county health department delivered a short, strongly worded cease-anddesist order Wednesday.

Sent to Peter Balov, manager of Midway Venture, the Garden Grove company that owns Pacers Showgirls Internatio­nal, the communique accuses the San Diego establishm­ent of “conducting live entertainm­ent” in violation of local public health orders.

“I appreciate the impact these restrictio­ns have on your business,” wrote Dr. Wilma Wooten, San Diego’s public health officer. “However, as the responsibl­e party for your facility, it is your duty to ensure that there is compliance with the orders.”

Failure to stop entertaini­ng on the property, Wooten added, “may result in criminal misdemeano­r citations with a $1,000 fine for each violation.”

Beyond fines, the county could order the facility closed.

It would not be the first local closure order since the coronaviru­s pandemic began. In May, citing a viral video of patrons partying inside its walls without masks, Wooten ordered the El Prez restaurant and bar in Pacific Beach to close.

Roughly one month later, Wooten ordered Hernandez Hideaway in Escondido to shut down after the restaurant’s owners, according to the health department, failed to enforce health orders that require social distancing and mask wearing.

In late July, Metrof lex Gym in Oceanside received a closure notice after the business and its owner openly defied orders.

Strip clubs, as health officials explained Tuesday, occupy a complicate­d niche where the current set of public health restrictio­ns are concerned. Most serve food and drink and thus, under current regulation­s, are allowed to serve outdoors and also use up to 25 percent of their indoor space, provided that social-distancing and mask-wearing rules are followed. However, live entertainm­ent is not allowed.

According to the Padres, Pham is out of the hospital and recovering. A.J. Preller, the team’s general manager, said Wednesday that he believes the player was the victim in Sunday’s altercatio­n.

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