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Monday, June 08, 2015

New Jersey Cops Used Riot Control On Unarmed Concert Attendees At Hot 97 Summer Jam!

Chris Brown and Tyga performs at Summer Jam.

The conservative Craigslist didn't put on the Texas cop being filmed slamming an unarmed teenage girl to the ground. That seems to get a lot attention. And yes, it's driven another controversy for the nation's law enforcement and the Black community.

So in order to counter balance the controversy, the website top line.

And I bet you money that the partisan agitators, concern trolls, and racist bastards got wind of it.

WQHT-FM 97.1 (Hot 97) is New York's famed hip-hop/R&B station. It host the Summer Jam events where many hip-hop acts come to perform for 300,000 fans and it gives newcomers a chance to broaden the entertainment gamble.

Like the Governor's Ball, the SummerJam events are usually packed with a whole lot of hip-hop stans. The stans are between the ages of 18 -34. The crowds are big.

The event is held in East Rutherford, NJ at the MetLife Stadium. The stadium is home of New York's NFL teams, AFC Jets and NFC Giants.

The AP reports New Jersey State Police blocking gates outside of a major hip-hop concert at MetLife Stadium had bottles thrown at them by angry people in the crowd who were trying to get inside - some without tickets - and they later used tear gas to try to disperse them, according to officials.

Crowds at the Hot 97 Summer Jam concert became upset Sunday night when the gates were closed and blocked off by police in riot gear. An armored state police vehicle began blasting a piercing loud noise to try to disperse the crowd and police later deployed tear gas.

Additional troops were sent for "crowd control" and arrests were made, a police spokesman, Sgt. Gregory Williams, told The Associated Press. State police didn't release details about what measures they used to disperse the crowd. The number of arrests wasn't immediately known.

The disturbance began when crowds of people tried to "illegally" force their way into the sold out event by climbing over fences and forcing their way through security, state police said in a statement Sunday night. Police said they insisted that everyone outside of the gate leave the stadium complex to avoid congestion when the concert ended.

Videos and photos posted by people outside of the stadium on social media showed fights between concertgoers and police in riot gear blocking the entrance. Images also showed police using large military-style vehicles to try to disperse the crowds.

Janae Griffin, who drove up from Baltimore for the concert but wasn't able to get inside, said the parking lots outside were chaotic.

"People were throwing bottles across the crowd," she said. "We got into a confrontation with a guy who was deliberately trying to vandalize a police car and was just making it worse of a situation than it needed to be."

The major concert is hosted annually by a New York radio station and was headlined Sunday by Kendrick Lamar, Trey Songz, Big Sean and Chris Brown.

Emmis New York, which owns Hot 97, said in a statement that refunds will be offered for ticket holders whose tickets were not scanned. They said the concert sold out Sunday evening and that "a small number of people created an unsafe environment, and for the safety of all guests, the New Jersey State Police were on scene to disperse the crowd." The gates to get inside were then closed and no one else was allowed in.

It wasn't immediately clear if there were any injuries.

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