WATCH: 55 Kids and Teens Charged in Massive Hersheypark Opening Day Brawl That Forced Families to Hide, Part of 'Teen Takeover' Trend Turning Public Spaces into War Zones * The Gateway Pundit * by Cassandra MacDonald

www.thegatewaypundit.com

A police officer restrains an individual on a bench as a crowd of onlookers records the incident at a public event.

Hersheypark, the iconic chocolate-themed Pennsylvania amusement park, turned into a frightening chaos for families on opening day when dozens of kids and teens began fighting and forcing rides to stop.

Nearly two months later, Derry Township Police announced that 55 individuals between the ages of 12 and 19 had been criminally charged in connection with the brawl. Just three of those charged are adults: Omar Ibraham, 19; Jerome Ross III, 18; and Quaneek Williams, 18.

Charges include simple assault, conspiracy, theft, failure to disperse, disorderly conduct, aggravated assault, riot, and other misdemeanor and felony offenses.

The incident took place on Friday, April 3, during the park’s 120th season opener.

Park security reported multiple groups of teenagers fighting in various areas.

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Derry Township Police assisted security in breaking up the altercations, initially arresting two juveniles and one adult while removing several others from the property.

The chaos was so severe that at least one roller coaster was halted mid-ride for safety reasons, and witnesses described parents desperately hiding their families under tables as the nightmare unfolded around them.

Local media also obtained photographs and video footage of the violence.

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This incident is the latest in a disturbing nationwide pattern of “teen takeovers,” large gatherings of juveniles organized via social media apps like TikTok, Instagram, and Snapchat that frequently spiral into violence, vandalism, theft, and general mayhem.

Promoted with hashtags and flyers, these events have overwhelmed public spaces from malls and beaches to restaurants and parks, often leaving businesses trashed and families in fear.

Recent violent examples include the March 29 incident at Bayshore Mall in Wisconsin, where hundreds of teens descended on the shopping center after viral social media posts, sparking fights and chaos throughout the mall and leading to multiple arrests.

On May 16, at least 10 teenagers fought inside the Navy Yard Chipotle in Washington, D.C., throwing chairs at customers who scrambled for safety, prompting the FBI to join the investigation.

A teen takeover at Tampa Park, Florida, on May 8, erupted into fights and disorder, resulting in 22 arrests by Tampa Police.

Later that month, around 1,000 teenagers flooded Icon Park in Orlando on a Saturday night, causing fights and prompting nine arrests on charges including battery on an officer and trespassing.

There have been dozens of other incidents nationwide.

While social media has been a driving force, an extreme lack of parental supervision and lenient juvenile justice policies are what is really enabling these mobs. They have been almost exclusively minority teens, typically black.

In many cases, participants face minimal immediate consequences, encouraging copycat behavior.

To get serious about stopping this behavior, many are calling for parents to be held criminally liable for their teenagers’ antics.

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