In advance of the gathering, the feds had created a National Rainbow Incident Management Team, with around sixty law enforcement agents and Forest Service staffers assigned to handle the event. Thousands of people attended this year’s gathering, and according to Forest Service estimates, they racked up 495 law enforcement actions including incident reports, written warnings, violation notices and arrests.
“These law enforcement actions ranged from inoperable vehicle equipment, damage to natural resources, narcotics possession and/or distribution, and interference with federal officers and assisting other cooperating law enforcement agencies,” says Hilary Markin, the team’s public information officer.
The numbers were down from last year’s gathering, which resulted in approximately 600 law enforcement actions. Even so, Markin says that officers found large amounts of illegal drugs, particularly fentanyl, as well as LSD, heroin, methamphetamines, psychedelic mushrooms, cocaine and marijuana — which is legal in Colorado, but not on federal lands.
Law enforcement is still in the area, as are dozens of Rainbow Family members who committed to staying and helping to clean the area.
According to the Rainbow Family website, organizers met on July 7, the last day of the 2022 gathering, to determine the location of next year’s event; that information has not yet been posted.
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