http://www.calaverasenterprise.com/articles/2005/06/24/news/news03.txtSheriff squares off with festival promoter
By Vanessa Turner
Friday, June 24, 2005 12:26 PM CDT
A perceived crackdown by law enforcement officers at last weekend's Sierra Nevada World Music Festival infuriated concert-goers, signaling what could be the end of the annual event in Calaveras County.
Festival promoter/manager Warren Smith said the Sierra Nevada World Music Festival, a three-day event featuring reggae artists from around the world, will most likely not be returning to the Calaveras County fairgrounds next year after Sheriff's deputies went on a "search and destroy" mission this past weekend.
"They did hundreds of illegal searches," Smith said. "They scoured. There was no due process."
Sheriff Dennis Downum opposes the Sierra Nevada World Music Festival being held at the Calaveras County Fairgrounds or in Calaveras County at all, but he insists that's not why his deputies were cracking down on concertgoers last weekend.
"If you're going to run and promote a festival that's built on drug use, you should expect some of your people to get arrested," Downum said.
With six deputies, including one undercover officer taking videotape, the Sheriff's Department arrested 17 people at the three-day festival that ran Friday through Sunday at the fairgrounds.
The filming was "just for our information," Downum said. "If the quality is any good, I'm going to try to put it on public TV. If there's criticism about us being there and working this event, then we can show the people why we were there. I think they would be very happy we were."
Smith said the sheriffs "probably have the right" to go undercover and film. "It's just probably part of their tools. But, they're not encouraging us to grow or stay there.
"The sheriffs knew if they did this that we would leave," he added.
Downum said he has no control over whether the concert leaves but made it clear he'd be happy if it did.
"You're darn right we'd like to see it go away," he said. "We don't see any need for bringing a bunch of people from Marin County up here to smoke dope."
"They were probably smoking marijuana," Smith admitted.
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