Thursday, October 19
College students rave about new venue
 
 Associated Press

MIDWAY, Utah -- Security has been tightened at the cross-country skiing venue for the 2002 Olympics after dozens of college students broke into a new building and threw a rave party.

Deputy Sheriff Wayne Winterton was passing through the normally quiet residential area around 1 a.m on Friday, Sept. 22, when blaring music caught his attention. In his report, Winterton said he saw at least 15-20 cars driving at high speed around the cross-country skiing oval.

The students fled when Winterton called for help. Police stopped as many trespassers as they could but failed to catch the ringleaders. No arrests were made.

Investigators said nearly 100 students from Brigham Young University and Utah Valley State College's Orem campus were at the rave.

Damage to the $1.7 million building was surprisingly limited: A doorknob was broken and the carpets will require about $2,000 to $2,500 to clean.

The event organizers apparently charged $3 a head for admission and even hired disc jockeys to provide music.

"It was very creative and somewhat humorous in hindsight, although that night it wasn't," said Kevin Jardine, the venue's construction manager.

Jardine said the partygoers broke into the newly constructed venue -- called Soldier Hollow -- at "its most vulnerable," only days before dead bolts were installed and just weeks before the Salt Lake Organizing Committee planned to post around-the-clock residents at the approximately 200-acre site.

The students cut the locks on the area's gates as well as the padlock on the building's front door.

Wasatch County Olympic Coordinator Bob Mathis said security a month later still is not what it should be.

"They dodged a bullet," said Mathis, noting that the county looks to the state and the organizing committee to secure the site because Soldier Hollow is a joint SLOC-state venture.

Jardine said a groundskeeper will take up residence this weekend and that permanent locks have been installed on the main building.

Posting a full-time guard is doubtful, however.

"It gets back to budgetary issues," Jardine said.