Seaside Heights Braces for Memorial Day Crowds After Last Year’s Boardwalk Violence
SEASIDE HEIGHTS, N.J. — With Memorial Day weekend approaching, Seaside Heights officials are preparing for another surge of crowds after last year’s holiday chaos turned the Jersey Shore town into a flashpoint for violence, mass arrests, and emergency boardwalk shutdowns.
Local leaders say this year’s response will look very different.
Mayor Anthony Vaz told News 12 New Jersey that the borough plans to deploy a large-scale law enforcement operation aimed at preventing the kinds of fights, stabbings, and crowd takeovers that overwhelmed the town during previous holiday weekends.
“We’re coming in full force. We’re not going to take any nonsense,” Vaz told reporter Jim Murdoch. “We’re bringing in the FBI, state police, we have dogs. We’ve come up with a systematic plan in the event we need to make arrests or control crowds.”
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The mayor also warned that borough officials are prepared to shut down the boardwalk entirely if conditions spiral out of control. Vaz did not respond to requests for comment today from Shore News Network.
Last Memorial Day Weekend Brought Arrests and Stabbings
Seaside Heights drew national attention during previous Memorial Day weekends after massive crowds — many organized through social media and unsanctioned gatherings — flooded the boardwalk area.
Authorities estimated crowds reached nearly 100,000 people during the height of the holiday weekend chaos.
Police reported between 73 and 150 arrests over the multi-day period, including dozens of juveniles. Violent incidents included multiple fights, large brawls, and three separate stabbings involving young men ages 18, 21, and 22 within a single block near the boardwalk.
Investigators also recovered a firearm from a 21-year-old man during enforcement operations.
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As fights continued into the night despite a juvenile curfew, police eventually shut down and cleared the boardwalk before midnight.
The victims in the stabbing cases reportedly did not cooperate with investigators, and authorities initially struggled to identify suspects amid the crowds.
Security Presence Expands Across Jersey Shore
This year’s crackdown comes after similar crowd-control problems erupted earlier this month in Long Branch at Pier Village, where authorities said between 750 and 1,000 teenagers and young adults gathered in chaotic scenes that forced businesses to close early.
Law enforcement agencies from across Monmouth County responded after fights broke out in the area. Officers formed crowd dispersal lines to move people toward the train station while local officials imposed an 8 p.m. curfew.
The incidents reinforced growing concerns among Jersey Shore communities that social media-driven meetups and “pop-up parties” could again overwhelm beach towns during major summer weekends.
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Key Points
• Seaside Heights plans heavy police presence ahead of Memorial Day weekend crowds
• Mayor Anthony Vaz warned officials could shut down the boardwalk if violence erupts
• Last year’s holiday weekend brought mass arrests, stabbings, and crowd-control emergencies
New Rules Target Disorderly Crowds
Following last year’s violence, Seaside Heights officials approved stricter rules designed to limit late-night disorder and unsupervised juvenile gatherings.
The borough implemented several changes, including:
• Curfews for minors
• Adjusted boardwalk operating hours
• Nighttime backpack restrictions
• Rental rules requiring guests under 21 to stay with an adult
The boardwalk also instituted a hard closing time each night.
Police agencies, including Ocean County law enforcement units and SWAT teams, previously assisted Seaside Heights officers during major crowd incidents.
Officials have not publicly detailed the full security strategy for this weekend, but Vaz indicated state and federal agencies will support local police operations if necessary.
Businesses Hope for Safer Holiday Weekend
The heightened security effort comes during one of the most economically important weekends of the year for Shore businesses, many of which rely on Memorial Day crowds to launch the summer tourism season.
Last year’s violence and emergency closures rattled business owners who feared the disorder could damage the borough’s reputation and discourage family tourism.
Some residents and local officials have pushed for stronger enforcement and harsher penalties tied to public fights, curfew violations, and disruptive gatherings after repeated crowd incidents at Shore destinations in recent summers.
As Memorial Day weekend approaches, borough leaders say their goal is to avoid another repeat of the scenes that forced emergency shutdowns and overwhelmed police resources last year.
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