• e . http://www.portlandobserver.com PoX doL ^er Online f f IhA W j Diversity Wins Black and Latino \ filmmakers bring home Oscars See story, page Pa ^e 4 r " 'w Going Worldwide Local emcee ‘16 Bars ’ boasts global ex exposure slobal p°sure^ See See M Metro, etro, page 9 m page 9 H kJ\ A H ^R T IjJortunmO'His enter 44 ‘Pitv fD ’ City r>/Roses Number 10 llji a I j f l I l 3 www.portlandobserver.com www.portlandobserver.com Wednesday Wednesday • • March March s 5, ?ni4 2014 Established in in 1970 19/0 Established __ i r ^ - Committed to Cultural Diversity S6dl S ,Z P t ^ ^ ,heBIUeM°nkiShal,ed,OllOWin^ Hip Hop Shakedown D onovan M. S mith T he P ortland O bserver by began to engulf both the immediate blocks around the venue, and inside. In the book “Art of War,” mastermind general Sun Tzu The enforcement action was what many in Portland’s hip proclaims that “the whole secret lies in confusing the enemy, hop music scene see as on-going, targeted police harass­ so that he cannot fathom our real intent,” and on Saturday, ment of rap shows. at the Blue Monk there was certainly confusion injected Over 20 officers from the Portland Police Bureau as well as between the grooves of Hip-Hop that were meant to be the a Portland Fire Marshal ended up being at the Blue Monk that star of the night. night. The authorities said they went to the entertainment Three of the biggest homegrown Hip-Hop acts in the city, site initially over concerns about possible gang affiliations, Luck-One, Mikey Vegaz, and Illmaculate, were billed to but then escalated their response over fire safety issues headline an intimate stage at the restaurant and entertain­ because it appeared the downstairs venue was overcrowded ment venue located at Southeast 33rd and Belmont. and they couldn’t get a radio signal or cell phone connection The sold-out show however was brought to an abrupt halt to reach 911 dispatch. once Illmaculate took the stage, stating that he would not The fire marshal, Portland Fire Bureau inspector Rob perform as a result of the ever-swelling police presence that Cruser, talked with the Portland Observer on the night of the Show comes to abrupt end after police swarm club event. He said he personally counted 135 bodies in the perfor­ mance area. An official police report quoted the tally as “at least 120 people in the room;” and the Blue Monk website said they have a capacity of 100 in a cabaret-style setting. Cruser denied that there was an effort to shut down the show, but said he did require that the crowd get thinned down to a legal capacity. “I didn’t shut down the show off immediately, which I could’ve done,” Cruser said. “I wanted to work with the promoter to see if we could keep the show going.” He said he picks a “handful” of shows to check in on nightly, and Saturday’s inspection was random. continued on page 5