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Brixton Fridge busted in massive police raid!

They should legalise it and sell the lot in Boots. End of most problems.

No more wasting police time, prison places on people merely selling that which people want to buy, to put in their own bodies.

Maybe they could sell pills in clubs along with bottles of water, beers etc.

And have special snorting cubicles with nice mirrors.

Yeah, some people would still fuck themselves up.

But they already do, and it would be entirely their own fault.

Giles..
 
And do we know what scale of dealer this guy is?
Hopefully one of considerable impact - that's quite a sentence, so he may have had loads and loads.

And I agree with Detective-Boy about 1 less venue in the hands of drug gangs. That's the problem - not the odd individual and an E.

But agree with Giles more.
 
Red Jezza said:
And most of the patrons have absolutely no objection to the premises 'descending further' etc (I know - I go to the Fridge often), and would rather see more drugs in there, not less. :confused:
I'm not referring to "descending" as increased drug use.

I'm referring to descending into the control of the place falls into the hands of the drug dealers. Then guns appear. And protection rackets. And people start getting assaulted, and raped, and killed.

It happens. I've seen it happen. You really do NOT want a venue of that size falling into the hands of the really bad guys.
 
Of course I don't - that would be a nightmare. I know it can happen too - i saw it happen in Manchester in the early 90s. it was awful.
however, i've been going to the Fridge since the late 80s. throughout that time, there has been roughly the same levels of widespread drug dealing and usage.
to my - admittedly untrained - eye, the place hasn't seemed that much under the control of the tooled-up gangsters brigade. not once. i've never once seen anyone pull a piece, or even agro between dealers.
all i can go by is evidence of my own eyes. There really has never seemed to me to be a problem of that nature.:confused:
 
Generally, in E-d up venues, you don't get much aggro.

Not like you do in R&B, garage & hip-hop clubs, where all the dealers (and half the punters!) seem to regard packing a knife or even a gun as as much of an essential as I do bringing my keys, my wallet and maybe a comb!

Giles..
 
Giles said:
Generally, in E-d up venues, you don't get much aggro.

Not like you do in R&B, garage & hip-hop clubs, where all the dealers (and half the punters!) seem to regard packing a knife or even a gun as as much of an essential as I do bringing my keys, my wallet and maybe a comb!

Yep, and these are also the same nights that sell the most alchohol...! :rolleyes:
 
Giles said:
Generally, in E-d up venues, you don't get much aggro.

Agreed. And the random pissheads really stand out.
Also lots of door staff and taxi drivers have told me they'd prefer to work at/pick up fares from those types of venue, as people tend usually to be so much more friendly/so much less trouble.
 
detective-boy said:
I'm referring to descending into the control of the place falls into the hands of the drug dealers. Then guns appear. And protection rackets. And people start getting assaulted, and raped, and killed.

It happens. I've seen it happen. You really do NOT want a venue of that size falling into the hands of the really bad guys.

But why would drug gangs run the place like that? People would stop going which isn't a very good business model for drug dealing.
 
PacificOcean said:
But why would drug gangs run the place like that? People would stop going which isn't a very good business model for drug dealing.
Don't ask me mate. It's just what they do. They get to the point where they think they can do what they like and it goes down hill from there ...
 
detective-boy said:
Don't ask me mate. It's just what they do. They get to the point where they think they can do what they like and it goes down hill from there ...

I may be wrong, but....
My perception is that whether or not this happens frequently has to do with which drugs are being sold, and their users.
Clubs which have problems like this tend, it seems, to be the r'n'b and garage venues, where there's a lot of coke used; coke tends to have two particularly problematic effects (in this context) on many users - (1) ego the size of a house, plus (2) paranoia to match - the two factors seem to be a recipe for violence between users ('hey you stop eyeing up my woman', or 'I don't like the way you're looking at me', for example); and with so much money involved, the systemic violence amongst dealers, especially if they're users, might be almost inevitable.
 
Fridge under new management?

From another forum (i really should do some work at some point today):

passing The Fridge, which has sat empty for a long, long time, I noticed that it had an announcement on the canopy (first time that the letters have been changed since I reviewed Beyond there the night that Matinée launched at Fabric) saying that the old owners have now taken back control.

Does this mean that it could creak back to life?

and

The notice on the doors says that the landlords 'Fire Limited' have re-entered the premises and changed the locks.

attachment.php


Anyone know what's going on? Has The Fridge gone back to Fire/Orange? If so thi smay not be entirely good news, given how dire Fire has been for the last year. :(
 
went past today and it said andrew czawski (sp?) is back in charge. he's the chap who ran love muscle back in the 90s! it'd be nice if he put some decent nights back on.
 
Here's the full Press Association report of what happened:

200 POLICE IN DRUGS RAID AT TOP LONDON CLUB
By Neville Dean, PA Crime Correspondent
Eleven people have been arrested following a drugs raid at a top London
nightclub.
More than 200 officers swooped on The Fridge in Brixton, south London, last
night to investigate allegations of Class A drug dealing.
Scotland Yard said four men and two women were held on suspicion of possession with intent to supply Class A substances.
Five people were arrested on suspicion of possession of Class A substances.
They are all in custody and will be questioned later today.
The spokesman added that four people received formal warnings for possession of a small amount of cannabis, while a further nine will be investigated after they were found to be in possession of a small amount of Class A substances.
Officers recovered drugs, believed to be cocaine and ecstasy, and a large
amount of money in the raid which followed a two-month covert intelligence
operation, police said.
The dramatic raid was triggered by a command "attack, attack" at just after
11.25pm as clubbers were arriving for the start of the venue's "Polysexual"
night.
Scores of officers then burst in through the front door while others covered
the rear. Police intelligence suggested the alleged dealing was taking place inside and around the female toilets. Earlier yesterday, in connection with the raid, a 29-year-old man was arrested in Harrow, north-west London, on suspicion of possession with intent to supply Class A drugs.
The operation, codenamed Atuna, was led by CO14, Scotland Yard's specialist Clubs and Vice unit, and included officers from the Territorial Support Group. They swept into the club - which is housed in an old converted cinema - took control of the foyer and the dancefloor, turned the music off and the lights up.
Plain-clothes officers, operating undercover, were inside the club as the raid
began. Around 130 clubbers were inside at the time of the raid, although it has the capacity for many more. Some clubbers were then brought into the foyer and searched for drugs.
Senior officers were keen to stress that the raid was not targeted at a
particular type of music or style of event, but was instead designed to meet
community concerns.
However, many disgruntled revellers who had to leave the venue complained that their night had been ruined, and asked why it was necessary to halt the night rather than just remove the alleged dealers.
Chief Superintendent Martin Bridger, Borough Commander for Lambeth, apologised to those who had travelled a long way to the club only to see their night end prematurely. He said that substances thought to be ecstasy and cocaine had been found at the club, and insisted that drug dealing had to be tackled.
"Drug dealers and the misery they cause are not welcome in Lambeth.
"The local community and police will not tolerate their criminal
behaviour."
Mr Bridger indicated that the venue's licence would now be reviewed.
"What is clear is that there will be a review of the premises and the control
mechanisms they have in place for keeping drugs out of the premises," he said.
Inspector Chris Bedwell, from the Clubs and Vice Unit, said: "Thousands of
people flood into the capital's world famous nightclubs every weekend.
"It is our job to work closely with the licensees, club owners and councils
to make sure that these clubbers are safe.
"If these clubs are turning a blind eye to Class A drugs being sold inside
then we have a duty to act and deal with these people so that a majority who go to pubs and clubs in London can do so in a safe crime-free environment."
Mr Bedwell said the alleged dealing inside the club was "blatant and
obvious" and that the intelligence operation had been running for as long as
five months.
Uniformed police officers formed a cordon around the entrance early today and handed out leaflets to clubbers that explained why the raid was taking place.John Roberts, the Metropolitan Police Authority's lead member for Lambeth, said the operation was part of a wider attempt to end the misery that drug dealing caused to the community.
Mr Roberts said: "By listening to the community and responding to their
concern we can tackle drug dealing in Lambeth.
"Tonight's operation is part of a much bigger picture where, together, the
police and the community are targeting the anti-social criminality that drug
dealing breeds and the misery that is causes."
He added: "Brixton is saying `enough is enough'. People come to Brixton to
have fun and enjoy the nightlife - they do not want to come to clubs where they are being peddled drugs."
The Fridge nightclub started in the early 1980s and moved into the converted
cinema in 1985.

For 'Italian Job' fans, there may be a certain comedy factor in a copper named 'Mr Bridger', tee hee.

They did a massive raid on a Plymouth club a while ago, The Dance Academy, which has been shut down ever since. It's ridiculous to expect a club to operate a completely clean house, though. There'll always be a demand for drugs and where there's a demand then there'll be a supply the same as for any other commodity.

And shutting down a club is unlikely to put more than a temporary pinprick in the profits of whichever gang is operating there as they'll only be back again when the place reopens under new management.

I remember a former workmate of mine who moonlighted as a bouncer on Union Street in Plymouth (a fun place to be a bouncer, I don't think) and he told me that they'd often turn a blind eye to one dealer or firm of dealers in order to avoid a perpetual turf war between rival firms all trying to control the dealing in the same club. Whether or not that's standard practice among bouncers around the country I don't know.
 
I think you have to look at the Hacienda, probably the 1st proper pill club to realise what happens if you don't let one gang or another control the place.

I think there was at least one shooting a month, some as often as once a week.
 
the owners of Fire have been evicted from the Fridge nightclub and that the Love Muscle creators "Andrew Czezowski and Susan Carrington have resumed control.

http://discodamaged.typepad.com/ddnews/2008/11/fridge-back-in-old-hands.html

Interesting! I'd love to see decent nights back on at The Fridge but it sounds like the venue is beyond dilapadated these days. Fingers crossed :)

eta - and there's more... Orange (owner of Fire) is saying it's leaving Brixton because of homophobia :rolleyes: - not because it's lost the plot and started running out of money. Oh no.

http://www.homovision.tv/orange-leaving-brixton-because-of-homophobia/
 
I'd love to see the Fridge used as a live venue again. I've seen some excellent shows there.

Exactly , maybe when the Astoria closes it will have more of a chance, has tons more atmosphere than that O2 complex. Problem is it needs loadsa work done on it I heard, roof etc
 
i went to Love Muscle @ The Fridge in the early 90s when i was about 18 or so and twatted and wanting a night out late after we couldn't get in to see The Orb @ the Academy.

bit of an eye opener it was as i had no idea what was on :D
 
went past today and it said andrew czawski (sp?) is back in charge. he's the chap who ran love muscle back in the 90s! it'd be nice if he put some decent nights back on.
Yeah, the legal notices people have seen relate to AC repossessing the premises from Fire/Orange.

AC has the head-lease for quite a while yet. Mind you, I'm not sure he's ever managed to run a financially stable business there. For as long as I can remember the Fridge has always seemed to stagger from crisis to crisis, so we'll have to see ...
 
There is an article in this week's South London Press:

Fridge founder to revive club
South London Press Friday, 19 December 2008

A CLUB promoter has come out of retirement to bring the popular nightclub he made famous back to its former glory.

Throughout the ’80s and ’90s, the Fridge nightclub in Brixton was one of the capital’s most popular venues but its popularity waned after incidents including a high-profile drugs raid which saw several clubbers arrested.

Now its founder Andrew Czezowski and his partner Susan Carrington have taken control back from previous tenants the Orange Group, which ran the 1,100-capacity venue from January 2004 until last month.

Susan said: “It feels as if a light has been switched back on, on the building and on me. It’s like coming alive again.” Andrew said: “We will build it back up to where it was, or better possibly.

“We are certain we are going to get some real action going on here.”

Veteran promoter Andrew started his career booking bands such as The Clash and The Jam at legendary Covent Garden punk venue The Roxy.

One of Andrew’s new plans for the Fridge is to introduce more live music, but combining it with the clubbing culture he pioneered through the ’80s and ’90s – meaning go-go dancers, lasers and projections.

Andrew and Susan’s first big event after returning will be Love Muscle, the club’s famed gay night, on New Year’s Eve.
 
I remember a former workmate of mine who moonlighted as a bouncer on Union Street in Plymouth (a fun place to be a bouncer, I don't think) and he told me that they'd often turn a blind eye to one dealer or firm of dealers in order to avoid a perpetual turf war between rival firms all trying to control the dealing in the same club. Whether or not that's standard practice among bouncers around the country I don't know.

Formally my neck of the woods.I was born on Southside st by what was then the Fish Market.Good to hear Union st still has the same reputation.Do you still get the Sailors done there on shore leave getting legless and fighting?

I hope so.Good old British traditions need to be kept alive:)
 
Now its founder Andrew Czezowski and his partner Susan Carrington have taken control back from previous tenants the Orange Group, which ran the 1,100-capacity venue from January 2004 until last month.

Susan said: “It feels as if a light has been switched back on, on the building and on me. It’s like coming alive again.” Andrew said: “We will build it back up to where it was, or better possibly.

“We are certain we are going to get some real action going on here.”

QUOTE]

He turned up to a Future Brixton meeting as he was after the old Bradys.He was offering the Council cash up front.Didnt make the save Bradys lot happy.Still i dont now the guy personally.So cant judge
 
Good news , sounds like they've got the cash to do it up and open again. Must be loaded.

They're capitalising on the closing Astoria, hope there's gigs in there again soon.
 
Addison Lee charged me £42 last weekend. But that wasn't exactly Enfield Lock, it was somewhere Enfield way though.
 
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