Police raid bar on Marshall Street : 150 citations issued in return of Operation Prevent
By Shayna Meliker
Posted: 4/1/09, 5:04 AM EST Section: News
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At 12:30 a.m. today, 22 officers entered Maggies on Marshall Street, shutting the doors and checking IDs. Police allowed students to leave the bar through the back entrance - some wandering out in tears - holding pink, yellow and white slips requiring court appearances in late April. Some students made frantic calls from their cell phones, while others tried to get back into the bar to grab coats and find friends.
The two-hour raid, which Sgt. Joel Cordone of the SPD said has been planned for a month, resulted in citations for underage drinking, sale of alcohol to a minor and possessing or using fake identification. The tickets do not list a specific fine, but do give a date for required appearance in traffic court, he said.
Capt. Shannon Trice of the SPD estimated there were 300 people inside the bar and that about half received citations. Depending on the judge, the fines could cost between $100 and $250, Trice said.
The raid involved officers from SPD, the New York State Liquor Authority, the New York State Police and the Onondaga County Sheriff's Office.
The police operation marks the return of Operation Prevent, an initiative to reduce underage drinking near the university. The program began in 2003 with an $18,500 grant to the New York State Governor's Traffic Safety Committee. It uses sting operations at university-area bars to make arrests for underage drinking and using fake identification.
The last raid occurred 17 months ago, on Oct. 26, 2007, and resulted in almost 100 citations. That raid was planned after complaints from the university, which was seeing a rise in the number of students sent to the hospital for underage drinking.
But the motivation is different this time around, Cordone said, because the university did not contact SPD. He said this raid was driven by an increase in anonymous complaints to SPD and the state liquor authority from Syracuse residents.
"This is the number one way people end up getting assaulted, raped, become victims of crime, become injured," Trice said. "So we don't want people to drink too much."
Cordone said Maggies will be fined for violations of state liquor law because bartenders served underage patrons. The bar has had problems in the past with violations, he said.
Jenelle Tortorella, a junior broadcast journalism major, was issued a ticket for underage drinking. "The owners of this bar know the students are underage that go here," she said. "I feel like it was extremely premeditated and intended to make money for the police department. But the fact is, though, that they know were underage. They know we have fake IDs."
Cordone said the sting operation was carefully planned.
"It was packed. It was quite busy tonight," Cordone said. "And a lot of the people we dealt with said they expected it, it was coming, and they were surprised we didn't come sooner."
Cordone said another raid is already planned for the end of the semester.
"We'll be back, definitely. We'll be back," he said. "We're not done up here, or anywhere else in the city."
shmelike@syr.edu

The Daily Orange



Viewing Comments 1 - 10 of 26
doug martin
posted 4/01/09 @ 9:13 AM EST
as a graduate of SU 35 years ago, I follow the news from campus very closely - I see that there was a raid by the police a little over a year ago, spurred on by complaints from the university - isn't "chancy nancy" a signatory of the amethyst initiative, which advocates for the reduction of the legal drinking age? - am I missing something? - and I also see that these raids are funded by the governors' traffic safety committee - I would venture a guess that the vast majority of those arrested were going to be walking back to dorms, apartments, and fraternities/sororities - prohibition was an abject failure in the 20's/30's and it is an abject failure now - return the drinking age to eighteen now!
xnareshx
The Realist
posted 4/01/09 @ 9:47 AM EST
"The owners of this bar know the students are underage that go here," she said. "I feel like it was extremely premeditated and intended to make money for the police department. (Continued…)
Reality Check
posted 4/01/09 @ 10:05 AM EST
These students will be crying to their parents that they received citations for underage drinking, oh well!
You kids go to SU wake up! If you chose to have a fake ID and use it to get into bars then you risk the chance of getting caught, duh! That's the price you pay, Maggies should be fined but it's not like they are asking all underage kids to come drink in their establishment. (Continued…)
dan
posted 4/01/09 @ 10:39 AM EST
my spoons were platinum
keith
posted 4/01/09 @ 11:48 AM EST
i just dont get what the police think they are accomplishing, kids will still drink no matter what, they are only getting them to drink in an unsupervised environment rathen then one which has bouncers and bartenders who can cut kids off. (Continued…)
lolz
posted 4/01/09 @ 1:06 PM EST
pwned! for years maggies has been a haven for the underage. what does it say that nearly half the patrons were issued citations? the bar sucks anyway, just close that POS down. (Continued…)
Danny
posted 4/01/09 @ 2:12 PM EST
BAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
ann
posted 4/01/09 @ 2:28 PM EST
Bird Library will be a great place to put a living roof. The academy of science in san francisco has a new building with a living roof. It's awesome. (Continued…)
JD
posted 4/01/09 @ 2:30 PM EST
Google Jenelle Tortorella's name. Im sure she's pleased with the very first return.
Corbin C. Thompson
posted 4/01/09 @ 8:41 PM EST
Marketing majors will understand, the best way to bring attention to a product, idea or cause is to create an event around it. Sounds like this was the smart strategy employed by the SPD. (Continued…)
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