Fabric

Have you seen the report may by some police dude? Its not looking good but it also shows the gulf in understanding between the public and the authorities. One of the guys that died took 4 pills altogther which to me is just a ridiculous amount
 
Have you seen the report may by some police dude

Do you have a link to this? I read Howie B's piece about how he's seen police as being utterly useless in stopping drugs getting into fabric, I'd be interested to read how the Met see the issue from their side...

it also shows the gulf in understanding between the public and the authorities

This has, and will continue to be, a constant problem until authorities wake up to the realisation that people will take drugs wherever they please and just by shutting down venues it won't solve the issue.

Unfortunately for the rest of us, for the government it's easier to close a club than to put real effort into educating the masses as they can't be seen to be soft on drugs lest they lose their core voting demographic.

What worries me is, is this simply just going to delay the inevitable?

Even if fabric come through this with another (unwarranted) slap on the wrist, how long until the next time it happens? I'd put most of what I own on someone OD'ing in fabric long before the government relaxes it's position on drugs. Fabric will come under blame the next time and probably won't be able to survive another one of these investigations...
 
..oh, so big developer wants to make millions from redeveloping site and all of a sudden negative stories pop-up in the press.
 
That article is ridiculous, read through it yesterday. A lot of tosh and hearsay. When you break down the facts, the boys smuggled the stuff in themselves, took far too much, got into trouble and at that point sought help....what else can fabric do save strip searching everyone as they come in?!
 


Utter scaremongering:

"An undercover police officer on another date was also told Fabric’s bouncers sometimes pass confiscated substances on to their friends inside the club. The claim was not proven."

Not proven... hearsay, so why is this being reported?

"The first boy who died is alleged to have smuggled his own drugs past bouncers before taking them in the toilets with water bought at the bar."

Where is fabric's fault in this? Selling water?

"They said the further back in the queue clubbers were the higher the risk of them taking drugs or being targeted by dealers and noted that no one was asked to empty their pockets on entry."

So they're not inside the club and are buying drugs outside? Where is fabric's liability in this? Also, nobody wanting to get drugs into a club hides them in their f*cking pockets...

"They also noticed that the bars were “some of the quietest areas in the club

What are dancefloors?

"The banning of dealers is “wholly inadequate” and involves a binder containing 100 faces that door staff cannot be expected to memorise, Scotland Yard’s chief licensing officer Ian Graham adds."

Show me a club which has a 100% record on banning dealers, there's no solution here, just a useless statement.

The whole thing is a real load of shit, but worryingly this is what fabric are up against :(
 
Also a response from the petition creator after Sadiq Khan's letter the other day:

http://chn.ge/2bS5niq

Steve Lawler comments on the fabric situation:
http://tinyurl.com/jb468wr

Lawler echoing pretty much every other major name who has signed this petition. Enjoyed the tongue in cheek comment about the building being worth a lot to investors, I imagine this is a large part of what's going on behind the scenes at Islington Council...

It says a lot, and is a huge shame, that the council are less ready to listen to DJ's and people who spend their whole careers in fabric than to the dubious reporting of one officer.
 
It says a lot, and is a huge shame, that the council are less ready to listen to DJ's and people who spend their whole careers in fabric than to the dubious reporting of one officer.

A Met officer no less, you can trust them as far as you can throw them.
 
tbh i think i think alof of plain clothes pc's have done other operations over the years theres nothing that surprises me about this ones report. Its the misunderstanding of real life that irks me the most. Fabric is probably a safer place to be than most central london pubs / bars
 
Yeah, shutting down a club where 2 people of died, whilst simultaneously failing to do anything about the hundreds of people getting stabbed/shot in gang wars. Such a waste of their resources that could be much better spend elsewhere. But they just want the headlines, rather than doing the important work.
 
So many arrests at notting hill carnival and plenty of drug taking yet havent heard a peep about shutting that down. Is it the fact that its a cost of 2 lives the difference?
 
Some of the commentary on there very worrying. A Councillor breaking down in tears over the deaths that have occurred? A ban on certain BPMs?

And the Met admitting they don't know how the Loop are able to provide drug testing at Warehouse Project in Manchester... don't know or never bothered to find out?
 
I have a feeling even if they are allowed to reopen, the amount of changes they will be forced to make will change the face of Fabric for ever.

Raised platforms for security?!!
 
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