South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Pandemic parties rage on

Revelers carry on despite South Florida’s growing crisis

- By Mario Ariza

Pulsing parties in swanky South Beach mansions. Raging raves in Miami warehouses. Backyard bashes in Palm Beach manors where teenagers drink late into the night.

South Florida is a world epicenter of coronaviru­s infections, but some irrepressi­ble revelers insist on trying to live out the subtropica­l promise of fun, sin and sun — COVID-19 or not.

Experts say the pandemic parties could cost them their life.

A review of police records, social media accounts, and interviews with profession­al event planners who refuse to let COVID-19 kill the music shows that South Florida’s world-famous party culture is alive and well.

■ Revelers often showed up to a $6 million waterfront mansion for festivitie­s, drawing Miami Beach code enforcers 43 times and the police 18 times. Then gunfire at a party there Sunday wounded two people, sending them to the hospital, according to a city spokesman. One man was arrested, accused of violat

ing city code by having the party, but the shooter vanished.

■ The Miami Police Department has responded to

11 “pandemic parties” in recent months, including five in June. But the organizers of one July Fourth bash say they pulled off their warehouse rager without police interferen­ce, and some 250 attended.

■ A large party delighted

50 teens in Royal Palm Beach, with officers finding them drinking at a home one late night in May. The man who opened the door refused to let the cops in, so they arrested him on the charge of resisting an officer. The cops shut the party down.

■ There were parties aplenty across South Florida around the Fourth of July weekend. Broward dispatcher­s received more than 170 calls about parties and gatherings that were too large or loud, from July 1 to July 6. The city of Miami shut down seven venues and parties over the holiday weekend for not following social-distancing ordinances.

Eric Knott, a pulmonary and ICU medicine trainee on the front lines of treating coronaviru­s patients, likens pandemic partying to drunken driving. “It’s like hopping into a car drunk without a seat belt and airbag, and assuming you won’t get hit,” Knott said.

Those who’ve attended such parties bring up the uncertaint­y of how long the pandemic will last — while there’s a need to get out. “We have no idea how long this is going to last and that seemed like a good way to let loose with the measures they were offering,” says Ashley Davis, a Miami resident who attended the July Fourth warehouse bash. The event’s organizers allayed partygoers’ concerns with a disinfecti­on machine that experts say is ineffectiv­e.

The median age of those infected by the virus in Florida has plummeted in recent months, going from 65 at the beginning of March to 39 this Wednesday, according to the Florida Department of Health. But younger, healthier people who stand a better chance of fighting it off can still easily transmit it to older, more vulnerable members of their households.

Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez has singled out partygoers for accelerati­ng the spread. “We saw a rapid rise in young people ... being positive to COVID-19 around mid-June,” he told CBS’ “Face The Nation.” “I think that that had a lot to do with probably socializin­g, young kids going to parties, maybe graduation parties at homes, because it’s been pretty locked down here for some time.”

Knott says that the intensive-care units at his hospital are getting full, and that the lack of medical resources could greatly increase the chances of death, even to young people who would normally be able to fight it off.

“Young people think they’re invincible, that the virus won’t kill them, because the mortality for them is super low,” he says. “But that’s assuming we have the resources. As soon as the numbers get high enough where we can’t give the 25-year-old oxygen, the mortality rate for that group goes up. So as soon as we’re full, that mortality rate argument goes out the window.”

The pandemic parties have taken place all across South Florida.

The Broward Sheriff’s Office responded to 13 calls about large, loud, parties or gatherings on July Fourth. Police records show officers responded to complaints about pool parties with more than 20 people, “large” parties where DJs set off fireworks, and large gatherings of 10 to 15 people setting off fireworks in the street. No one was arrested. Records for the other 157 complaints made between July 1 and July 6 were not immediatel­y available.

On July Fourth, officers from the Fort Lauderdale Police Department responded to a noise complaint in the 1300 block of

Citrus Isle. Police records show that cops found a group of 15 people gathered in the backyard. The police report notes that the house was a “Home Away vacation rental,” and that the renter of the residence was visiting from Massachuse­tts. Officers later returned to the scene to tell the party house to turn it down again. No arrests were made.

Broward County issued an order that took effect Friday, restrictin­g the occupancy of vacation rental properties solely to the people who rented them. The order was passed, because the rentals are being used to host parties.

Pandemic parties have also been broken up in Palm Beach County.

According to police reports, when officers first arrived at a large house in village of Royal Palm Beach on May 22 and knocked on the door, they were met by a drunken, belligeren­t man who claimed to be of legal age. Inside the house, the reports state, officers could see some 10 teens drinking. After backup arrived and the man who answered the door was arrested, officers allowed the 40 to 50 teenagers who had been in the backyard — “consuming what appeared to be alcoholic beverages and yelling at each other”— to leave.

But some of the largest and most violent parties have occurred in MiamiDade County.

Authoritie­s in Miami Beach arrested the man accused of throwing the July 5 party that ended in a double shooting. Court records show that Anthony Shnayderma­n, the organizer of the festivitie­s, was charged with using a residentia­l property as a commercial venue and with a misdemeano­r violation of the county’s emergency health ordinance. He was released on a $500 bond.

The shooting remains an open investigat­ion, and details why violence erupted are unclear, but WSVN-Ch. 7 showed footage of partygoers fleeing the house in panic as shot after shot rang out.

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