Teen takeover
A mall takeover or teen takeover is an event in which people gather in a public area, such as a mall, market, or park, with the ad hoc organization of such takeovers taking place over social media.[1][2] In June 2026, PBS reported, "'Teen takeovers' — where teens coordinate on social media to show up en masse at the same place and same time — have swept some U.S. cities in recent months. At times, these meetups have turned violent, putting officials on edge as schools across the nation let out for the summer."[3]
In 2026, amid the proliferation of no-cost AI image generation, flyers have been quickly produced and distributed via social media.[4]
History
The term "mall takeover" emerged in February 2026 at malls in major United States metropolitan areas, like the Cumberland Mall in Atlanta, Georgia,[5] the Green Acres Mall in Valley Stream, New York,[6] the Short Pump Town Center in Henrico County, Virginia,[7] and the Northshore Mall in Peabody, Massachusetts.[8] Such takeovers have led to violence and arrests:
- On May 16, 2026, at Christiana Mall in New Castle County, Delaware, led to the arrest of six juveniles after multiple fights broke out among a crowd of nearly 100 teenagers. Multiple law enforcement agencies responded to disperse the crowd, which had overwhelmed the parking lot and surrounding areas.[9]
- On March 29, 2026, at Bayshore Mall in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, youths were filmed fighting one another. 13 were arrested following a large police response.[10]
- On March 30, a takeover in Milwaukee's Moody Park led to fights, gunfire and arrests.[11]
- On April 25, a teen takeover occurred at Icon Park in Orlando, Florida.[12]
- On May 19, several hundred people flooded streets and danced on cars while getting into fights in Long Branch, New Jersey.[13] [14]
In all instances the overwhelming majority of the people involved in the incidents were Black teenagers, with some reports and commentators tying their actions to local funding and administration of youth activities and programs.[15] [16] [17][18][19][20][21]
However, other commentators blamed the criminal activity that took place during these incidents on lack of proper parenting.[22][23][24][25]
Response
Some of these events, such as the one at the Northshore Mall, were stopped before they could take place, while others were stopped after incidents occurred.[26] Curfews were met with calls for more youth advocacy, from groups such as BUILD on the West Side of Chicago.[27]
Nomenclature
The term "teen takeover" precedes "mall takeover," coming from the summer of 2019 as a reaction to more violent events in Chicago, attributed to events organized by social media flyers.[28][29]
See also
References
- ^ Becker, Kaitlin McKinley; Kwangwari, Munashe (February 20, 2026). "Braintree police warn of planned 'takeover' event at South Shore Plaza". NBC Boston.
- ^ Toole, Mike; Hanson, Julie (February 20, 2026). "Planned "mall takeovers" at South Shore Plaza and Northshore Mall prompt warnings from police: we have a "proactive plan"". CBS Boston.
- ^ Why 'teen takeovers' are taking off, PBS, June 9, 2026
- ^ "Instagram post about Milwaukee Mall Takeover". www.instagram.com. LockhearTVMediaGroup. Retrieved 27 April 2026.
- ^ Quinn, Patrick (2026-02-26). "Cumberland Mall to have teen curfew Saturday after 'takeover' at The Battery". Atlanta News First. Retrieved 2026-03-02.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Crawford, Logan (2026-02-20). "11 NYC teens arrested in illegal 'mall takeover,' with more planned in Nassau this weekend". News 12.
- ^ Roever, Alex (2026-03-14). "Large fight forces Short Pump Mall to close early". wric.com. Retrieved 2026-03-15.
- ^ Genzer, Samantha (2026-02-20). "Peabody police warn about 'Northshore Mall takeover'". Boston.com. Retrieved 2026-03-02.
- ^ Feitelberg, Rosemary (19 May 2026). "Six Arrested After Teen Takeover at Christiana Mall". WWD. Retrieved 1 June 2026.
- ^ Staral, Kaylee; Karr, Photojournalist Claire (30 March 2026). "13 people arrested after large crowd and fights at Bayshore Mall". TMJ4 News. Retrieved 31 March 2026.
- ^ "Milwaukee Police release drone footage of 'teen takeover' at Moody Park in March". TMJ4 News. 27 April 2026. Retrieved 27 April 2026.
- ^ Destefano, Madilyn (2026-04-30). "ICON Park releases statement, shares chaperone policy following 1,000-teen 'takeover'". WESH. Retrieved 2026-05-08.
- ^ "Hundreds of young people take over NJ beach town, sparking chaos and curfew ahead of Memorial Day weekend". 2026-05-21. Retrieved 2026-05-31.
- ^ Bonavita, Julia (2026-05-20). "Rowdy teen takeover hits popular beach hot spot with wave of arrests, assaults, emergency curfew: video". Fox News. Retrieved 2026-05-31.
- ^ Kokal, Katherine (2026-04-28). "Teen mall 'takeovers' prompt former public official to ask 'What do we owe our young people?'". WUWM 89.7 FM - Milwaukee's NPR. Retrieved 2026-05-31.
- ^ DeVine, Blake (2026-05-14). "Tampa advocates, parents push for solutions ahead of possible 'teen takeover' events". FOX 13 News. Retrieved 2026-05-31.
- ^ Smith, Valerie (2026-05-09). "Tampa police arrest Black 12-year-old during 'teen takeover,' then illegally share name in press release". Creative Loafing Tampa. Retrieved 2026-05-31.
- ^ CBS Chicago (2026-05-28). South Side youth weigh in on teen takeovers after recent gatherings turned violent. Retrieved 2026-05-31 – via YouTube.
- ^ LiveNOW from FOX (2026-05-25). Viral teen takeovers spark chaos nationwide. Retrieved 2026-05-31 – via YouTube.
- ^ Florida Gubernatorial Candidate James Fishback Blames Family Collapse for Black Teen Takeovers. Retrieved 2026-05-31 – via www.youtube.com.
- ^ Jason Whitlock Analogizes Black 'Teen Takeovers' to the KKK | Jason Whitlock Harmony. Retrieved 2026-05-31 – via www.youtube.com.
- ^ U.S. Attorney Pirro Announces New Enforcement Measures Targeting Teen Takeovers, U.S. Department of Justice, May 15, 2026
- ^ Polk sheriff Judd warns kids, parents about 'teen takeovers', Bay 9 News, May 21, 2026
- ^ Chicago alder considers fining parents over teen takeovers, Axios.com, May 27, 2026
- ^ Teen ‘takeovers’ push cities to take action as experts see echoes of the Covid pandemic, NBC News, May 28, 2026
- ^ Morse, Hannah. "Braintree Police say planned 'mall takeover' didn't happen. What we know". The Patriot Ledger. Retrieved 2026-03-02.
- ^ Hawkins, Shelby (April 4, 2025). "As Summer Approaches and 'Teen Takeovers' Return, Debate Over Chicago's Curfew Reignited". WTTW News. Retrieved 2026-03-02.
- ^ Cardona-Maguigad, Adriana (2023-07-13). "Who's behind the so-called 'teen takeovers' downtown?". WBEZ Chicago. Retrieved 2026-03-02.
- ^ Cardona-Maguigad, Adriana (2019-08-19). "Chicago Kids Use Social Media To Meetup Downtown, But Police Are Watching". WBEZ Chicago. Retrieved 2026-03-02.