More than 60 people were arrested
when mayhem erupted at the Hot 97 Summer Jam 2015 at MetLife Stadium,
where angry people in the crowd threw bottles at New Jersey State Police
blocking the gates and troopers used tear gas to try to disperse them,
authorities said Monday.
State police said
crowds of people tried to "illegally" force their way into the sold-out
concert Sunday night, climbing over fences and pushing their way
through stadium security personnel and cops clad in riot gear. The gates
to the stadium were shut and troopers were called in to help maintain
order; they had trash and bottles thrown at them, and 10 troopers
suffered minor injuries, authorities said.
An armored state
police vehicle began blasting a piercing loud noise to try to disperse
the crowd and police later deployed tear gas. Pepper spray was also
used.
Most of the 61
arrested were concertgoers who tried to scale fences and push their way,
police said. They face charges ranging from disorderly behavior to
soliciting without a permit to trespassing, possession of a weapon and
assault.
Photos and video
on Twitter and Instagram showed large crowds, trash-strewn streets and
barricades overturned in the stadium's parking lot.
Images also showed police in riot gear using large military-style vehicles to try to disperse the crowds.
"Major disturbance at Summer Jam -- fans vs State Police," @ChrisFHJordan tweeted.
Concertgoers
told NBC 4 New York people who legally bought tickets that cost
hundreds of dollars were turned away and told to leave. Emmis New York,
which owns the radio station Hot 97, said they'll refund tickets for
those people.
"When fans
realized tickets were not available at the box office, 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 were closed at that time. No further entry was permitted into the
event," the radio station said in a statement.
Artists Kendrick
Lamar, Chris Brown, Trey Songz and Big Sean were all scheduled to play
at the event, billed as "the hottest hip hop event of the year."
Laura Stylez of
the Hot 97 morning show criticized those who threw bottles at police,
and DJ Ebro Darden said Monday that fans shouldn't have tried to jump
the fence to get inside the venue.
"You cannot throw bottles at police," Stylez said on air Monday. "What is wrong with you?"
"We feel
disappointed by the activity of a small group of people that really
turned it into something it didn't have to be, which was chaos," Darden
told WPIX-TV. "There were tens of thousands of people inside who had a
great time. ... We're not going to allow a few people to jump fences, be
aggressive with the state police and allow the doors to remain open."
“A small group
of highly disruptive people ruined this concert for many others. They
created a danger to ticket-holders, stadium employees, and troopers on
the scene. Our troopers took the appropriate steps to restore order to
what was a brief and volatile situation,” Colonel Rick Fuentes,
superintendent of the New Jersey State Police, said in a statement.
Fifty-one people were arrested at the event last year, authorities said.