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Full story: Evanston Mayor Elizabeth Tisdahl revokes The Keg's liquor license

Published: Monday, January 30, 2012

Updated: Friday, February 10, 2012 05:02

Tom Migon

Ray Whitehouse/Daily senior staffer

The Keg owner Tom Migon at Friday's liquor license meeting.

Evanston Mayor Elizabeth Tisdahl has revoked the liquor license of The Keg of Evanston, 810 Grove St., according to a statement issued by the city Monday.

"It is always an extremely difficult decision to revoke a license of a local business, but I have to also consider the health and welfare of the community as a whole," Tisdahl said in a statement. "Serving minors alcohol is a serious matter that cannot be left unaddressed."

The seven-page order was signed by Tisdahl, who also serves as liquor board commissioner, and approved by top city attorney Grant Farrar.

The commander of the investigations divisions at the Evanston Police Department personally served the revocation notice to The Keg's owner Tom Migon earlier Monday morning, said EPD spokesman Cmdr. Jay Parrott.

The notice was also posted on the front of the building and said, "liquor shall not be sold, delivered, served or consumed at this establishment effective immediately."

As of 5 p.m. Monday, the doors at The Keg were locked and no lights were on inside.

"No liquor can be served on the premises," Parrott said. "But The Keg technically can open and sell food because his business has not been closed. Only his liquor license has been revoked."

EPD Chief Richard Eddington recommended Tisdahl to revoke the bar's license during a Friday hearing of the Liquor Control Review Board, where the city's attorney tried to prove The Keg was a haven for underage drinking in Evanston.

The Keg was ranked ninth-best college bar in America by Complex magazine in 2011. But after 19 people were cited at the bar for underage drinking earlier this month, the city raised questions about The Keg's ID enforcement.

The bar was temporarily closed on two previous occasions before losing its liquor license Monday. It was shut down for seven days in 2005 after a 19-year-old shot and killed another patron at the bar, and was closed again for two days in 2010 when an underage patron was injured during a fight.

Liquor control is "unquestionably a matter involved in public health, safety, morals and welfare" and therefore, the city holds broad regulatory powers, according to the order issued by the mayor.

The report found The Keg had "repeatedly and willfully" failed to comply with city codes and regulations regarding alcohol sales, and it pointed to the 147 citations issued at the bar since 2005 as evidence. Out of those 147 citations, 111 were alcohol-related.

Ald. Don Wilson (4th), whose ward includes The Keg, told The Daily shortly before the decision was issued that the situation was "disappointing" but local business "need to follow the rules and they need to follow them closely."

"I'm a grown up, and I realize people don't follow the rules," Wilson said. "But businesses should endeavor to make sure that what happens in their place is compliant and that's my expectation of everyone that does business in Evanston."

While presenting evidence during the Friday hearing, the city's lawyer quoted several posts from a Twitter account they alleged was owned and operated by The Keg's owner. One tweet said "The Keg knows no age, especially if you're under 21."

The mayor's order said the tweets "offer incontrovertible proof that The Keg, through its use of social media, expressly incited, encouraged, and assisted underage patrons in coming to The Keg and consuming alcohol."

However, The Daily reported Sunday that a Northwestern student who graduated last year was behind the @kegofevanston account. That student told NU Intel in February he assumed the tweets were "so outrageous" that "no one would think" it was actually connected to the downtown bar.

The account was deleted Friday after a final message was posted stating "this was and always has been unaffiliated with The Keg of Evanston and was only meant to be in good fun."

City spokesman Eric Palmer declined to comment Monday but said he discussed the matter with the city's legal department.

Now that the bar will be effectively shut down, Parrott said EPD can "direct its resources elsewhere" instead of spending time responding to responding to fights, other incidents and periodically checking the bar for underage drinking.

"Those type of incidents generate resources and time, and the officers then go down to investigate the complaints instead of patrolling other areas of the city," Parrott said. "The resource drain is an accurate portrayal."

The order officially bans Keg owner Tom Migon from applying for an Evanston liquor license in the future. Migon did not return multiple messages seeking comment Monday.

mc2014@u.northwestern.edu

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16 comments

Anonymous
Tue Jan 31 2012 00:50
anyone who supports underage drinking at the Keg has lost it. What if it was your lil brother that was shot or your lil sister getting grinded by some drunk dude? you guys are fuck*ng sick and need some perspective in life. Pathetic creatures
Anonymous
Tue Jan 31 2012 00:36
Hold on.

So a credit card is a "wholly deficient" second form of ID at the Keg, but, per the city of Evanston's website (http://www.cityofevanston.org/government/city-clerk/voter-information/), an acceptable form of ID to register to vote?

Okay, Tisdahl, okay.

Anonymous
Mon Jan 30 2012 19:37
@Fascist Evanston: Nobody decided the Keg doesn't "get to exist." It can stay open, the liquor license has just been revoked. Stop being such a tool
Oh, quit whining.
Mon Jan 30 2012 19:20
The law was broken there. Many times. The problem persisted, and it has hence been shut down. No sh*t, underage drinking is going to keep going on. People are still going to party at frats and at houses, and many of those party-goers are going to be underage. But know what? The frats and student apartments aren't serving liquor as their livelihoods with a liquor license issued by the city. If you're going to break the law, there are consequences. So no, this isn't the end all and be all of the fight against wasted douchebags stumbling around at two in the morning, but it's a good start.

Oh, and "Fascist Evanston," the business hasn't been closed, it has just lost the privilege to serve alcohol, because it was flagrantly abusing that privilege. Stop being such a damn tool.

Hawkeye
Mon Jan 30 2012 18:56
Of course it will curb underage drinking in Evanston!

It won't eliminate it, it won't end the underage demand, but it will make it just a little bit more difficult for the underage - and in this case we are talking about under-COLLEGE-age as much as NU students - to drink in Evanston. Sometimes you need baby steps.

And yes, there will probably be unintended consequences - like more parties in the off-campus Forbidden Zone between Ridge and Sheridan - but the city can deal with that when or if it happens. An underage, non-NU student was shot and killed at the Keg in 2005, and what has Tom Migon done to clean up the place since? Diddly-squat.

Anonymous
Mon Jan 30 2012 18:11
@ Ali L. If you read the order, you'll see the Key had a long history of violations and EPD visits. This was not out of the blue. And NU students weren't the only ones going there, so this wasn't just about students. Step back and take a larger view.
Anonymous
Mon Jan 30 2012 17:16
so... Evanston has decriminalized 10oz or less of marijuana (which, btw, is still completely illegal federally) but has shut down the Keg due to underage drinking. Hypocrisy, thy name is Elisabeth Tisdahl
I agree
Mon Jan 30 2012 16:48
I guess this is what passes for democracy in the City of Evanston. One woman, who has previously purposefully lied and mislead her constituency (referring to her denial that the city was ever planning on stepping up enforcement of the "brothel" law even after a city spokesperson publicly announced that they were as did the city's website), gets to decide which businesses do and don't get to exist.
anonymous
Mon Jan 30 2012 16:35
I guess this is what passes for democracy in the City of Evanston. One woman, who has previously purposefully lied and mislead her constituency (referring to her denial that the city was ever planning on stepping up enforcement of the "brothel" law even after a city spokesperson publicly announced that they were as did the city's website), gets to decide which businesses do and don't get to exist.
Anonymous
Mon Jan 30 2012 16:29
Right, because closing the Keg will curb underage drinking. It will be much safer instead for students to exert even more effort to hide their drinking. I'm sure safety is always priority #1 in the unmonitored basements of dorms and frats...
fascist evanston
Mon Jan 30 2012 16:28
I guess this is what passes for democracy in the City of Evanston. One woman, who has previously purposefully lied and mislead her constituency (referring to her denial that the city was ever planning on stepping up enforcement of the "brothel" law even after a city spokesperson publicly announced that they were as did the city's website), gets to decide which businesses do and don't get to exist.
Anonymous
Mon Jan 30 2012 16:26
I guess this is what passes for democracy in the City of Evanston. One woman, who has previously purposefully lied and mislead her constituency (referring to her denial that the city was ever planning on stepping up enforcement of the "brothel" law even after a city spokesperson publicly announced that they were as did the city's website), gets to decide which businesses do and don't get to exist.
Anonymous
Mon Jan 30 2012 15:55
etisdahl@cityofevanston.org
Ali L
Mon Jan 30 2012 15:55
I feel like this can't be the whole story - had Evanston given The Keg multiple warnings and they refused to enforce it? Had they had police officers check IDs? This seems like such an unbelievable overreaction - to shut down this man's business instead of trying some enforceable solutions - and is just one more bizarre action on Evanston's part against student activity. I hope the neighbors are happy when all the 21-23 year old students take their noisy dance parties off campus because there aren't other options in town.
Anonymous
Mon Jan 30 2012 15:54
Mayor Tisdahl's reign of terror is a scourge on this community.

Let her know how you feel about this decision.

http://www.mayor-elizabeth-tisdahl.com/contact.html

Anonymous
Mon Jan 30 2012 15:42
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