US Spring breakers go wild in chaotic footage of booze-soaked brawls, Savannah beach flooded with trash - "Tybee Island is fortunate that no lives were lost and no property destroyed"

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Wild spring break parties unleashed chaotic scenes in Savannah, Ga., as violent, booze-fueled brawls broke out at the annual Orange Crush gathering — including one between two topless women.

The annual Tybee Island spring break bash saw numerous fights erupting in shocking footage shared online, with the popular beach littered with trash left behind by the rampaging revelers.
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Wild spring break parties unleashed chaotic scenes in Savannah, Ga., as booze-fueled violent brawls broke out at the annual Orange Crush gathering. Richard Burkhart/Savannah Morning News / USA TODAY NETWORK

In one clip posted on X, two women can be seen lunging at each other before exchanging brutal punches.

During the intense exchange, their clothing bathing suit tops appear to fly off their bodies, drawing a strong reaction from the crowd as they fight while topless.

Another clip of the fight shared online shows a woman, seemingly holding her wig, while being dragged away and thrown onto the ground.

Multiple clips show both men and women crowding a boardwalk as fights continue to break out.
Multiple women in bathing suits can be seen pushing and shoving each other while onlookers peer down from atop the boardwalk’s railings, many taking out their phones to videotape the brawl.

“When did Tybee Island become such a s–t show?” one person asked online as the footage went viral.

As many as 50,000 college students inundate the small barrier island for the annual bash, which stretches along the 3-square-mile island that boasts a population of about 3,000.

The festival gained a reputation in the 1990s for being out of control, leading Savannah State University to disassociate with the event in 1991 because of the high incidence of crime.

The event returned to Tybee Island last year for the first time since 2020.
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Videos of the wild weekend circulated on social media, showing intoxicated revelers dancing to loud music and fighting. Richard Burkhart/Savannah Morning News / USA TODAY NETWORK
Last year, former Tybee Mayor Shirley Sessions said in a statement that Orange Crush Festival “was admittedly too large and chaotic.”

“But at the end of the day, Tybee Island is fortunate that no lives were lost and no property destroyed,” Sessions said at the time, promising to introduce measures to keep it under control.

Despite protests to the event this year, local officials said there were fewer spring breakers — and less criminal activity — than in previous years.

“The behavior has been pretty good today. We’ve responded to a few medical calls with the Tybee medical authorities and that’s pretty much the extent of what we’ve done today,” Major Bob Holley of the Georgia Department of Natural Resources told WSAV.

Those who spoke with the station said this year was less chaotic than previous years because it was only college-aged kids attending, a major contrast to last year which saw thousands of partiers who were not affiliated with the universities.
 
Fun fact- under an agreement imposed by the DOJ under the notorious nigger lover Donald Trump, the city of Tybee Island is legally required to pretend that 'Orange Crush' is exactly the same as the town's 4th of July parade, and St. Patricks Day, apart from the holy skin color of the participants of course. If they don't police those (perfectly peaceful) events with 100 state and county cops like they did this year with 'Orange Crush' to keep the chaos a little less violent than usual, they could well be sued over it.

EDIT: Ironically, one of the way they've been able to keep the costs down slightly is by working with motels and AirBNB owners etc to get free or discounted housing for officers, especially the staties and random park rangers who get brought in to assist. I mean, it feels a little bit like small town corruption, but it's not hard to understand the mutual interest there. There's no way the owners want to rent out their places to get trashed physically (or trashed in the reviews by a white family who didn't realize Tybee turned into a worse version of Port-au-Prince for the weekend), and just in case just not renting doesn't protect them, better way to make sure that random property damage doesn't occur than having a few GSP units parked outside?
 
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Fun fact- under an agreement imposed by the DOJ under the notorious nigger lover Donald Trump, the city of Tybee Island is legally required to pretend that 'Orange Crush' is exactly the same as the town's 4th of July parade, and St. Patricks Day, apart from the holy skin color of the participants of course. If they don't police those (perfectly peaceful) events with 100 state and county cops like they did this year with 'Orange Crush' to keep the chaos a little less violent than usual, they could well be sued over it.

EDIT: Ironically, one of the way they've been able to keep the costs down slightly is by working with motels and AirBNB owners etc to get free or discounted housing for officers, especially the staties and random park rangers who get brought in to assist. I mean, it feels a little bit like small town corruption, but it's not hard to understand the mutual interest there. There's no way the owners want to rent out their places to get trashed physically (or trashed in the reviews by a white family who didn't realize Tybee turned into a worse version of Port-au-Prince for the weekend), and just in case just not renting doesn't protect them, better way to make sure that random property damage doesn't occur than having a few GSP units parked outside?
Sounds like the city plans to fight back by suing the organizers for policing and cleanup costs:
https://www.wjcl.com/article/unperm...how-much-city-of-tybee-says-they-owe/60572292 (Archive)
 
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