Crime and Public Safety |
After brawls at the mall, Del Amo Fashion Center has a new rule: No minors without adults at times

Dozens of police cars from different police agencies were lined up after chaos broke out at Del Amo Fashion Center on Saturday, Dec. 30, 2023. (Photo by Raphael Richardson, Contributing Photographer)
Orange County Register associate Nathan Percy.  Additional Information: Mugs.1113 Photo by Nick Koon /Staff Photographer.
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Teenagers under 18 years old looking to go to Torrance’s Del Amo Fashion Center will need to bring an adult with them after 3 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays starting March 1, Simon Malls says.

The company announced the new Youth Supervision Policy on its website Friday, Feb. 23, following large, chaotic brawls at the shopping center in recent months, including one that involved about 1,000 minors, causing the mall to close early and shutting down nearby streets.

“We are committed to providing a pleasant and family-friendly shopping environment for all of our guests,” the statement says.

Those under 18 attempting to enter the mall at 3 p.m. or later on Fridays and Saturdays will need to be accompanied by an adult 21 years or older, according to the policy. Adults may be asked to provide proof of age in the form of a driver’s license or ID card, military ID, or passport.

One adult will be allowed to walk in with as many as four children during those time periods. “Adults are responsible for the actions of all of the youth they accompany,” the statement reads.

Adults who are found to be under 21 years old and those without acceptable identification will not be allowed in the mall.

Employees who are under 18 will be able to walk in without an adult and work their shifts on Friday and Saturday nights, but once those shifts end, the policy will kick in.

In late December, Torrance police arrested three girls and two boys, all of whom lived in areas near Torrance, after a gathering of 1,000 youths at the mall led to a brawl, police said. Two others suffered injuries during the melee, which spread to at least 34 nearby businesses.

Police closed streets surrounding the mall for seven hours while sorting out the commotion.

Three months prior, in August, police were at the mall to break up a fight also among an estimated 1,000 minors. The police response started after officers on foot patrol at the mall noticed a group of unruly teenagers that continued to grow and become increasingly rowdy.

One officer was injured during the disturbance, leading Torrance police to call for assistance from other agencies. The mall was closed four hours early due to the melee.

No reports of looting or vandalism were reported in either of those brawls.

Also in August, the Moreno Valley Mall in Riverside County announced a plan to require minors not accompanied by adults to wear identification after three separate fights broke out on a day that cheap movie tickets lured a larger-than-usual crowd of youngsters.

The minors would have to wear lanyards containing their names and their parents’ contact information if they were in the mall unaccompanied after 5 p.m. on weekdays or anytime on weekends, Chelsey Ritchie, a spokeswoman for mall owner Matt Ilbak, said. Their parents would be called if the youngsters misbehaved, she said.

It was not immediately known on Saturday if that policy remains in effect.

This is a developing story.

After a number of fights, unaccompanied minors face wearing IDs at Moreno Valley Mall

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