They have sped recklessly down highways, turned city streets into drag strips and taken over private parking lots to squeal tires and perform burnouts, all with spectators standing mere feet away as cars spin wildly in circles.
As in communities across the country, street racing has been a big problem this summer in the north metro city of Blaine — and the illegal activity has been compound by violence that included a shooting at an assembly near the Northtown Mall.
Now, the city is striking back. The City Council this month passed an ordinance — the first of its kind in Minnesota — that makes it a crime for two or more vehicles to engage in street racing and allows police to cite spectators who show up to watch. The policy went into effect Sept. 19.
"We have not had a good tool to manage it," Police Chief Brian Podany said. "This gives us a tool to do that."
Street racing gained traction in the Twin Cities and across the country with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, fueled by empty roads that resulted from stay-at-home orders, authorities said.
The secret and highly mobile events, known as "meetups," are often arranged on social media and have attracted as many as 400 vehicles at a time, according to law enforcement. Under the cover of darkness, drivers take over intersections and empty parking lots and spin around in circles at high speeds. Stunts that have included vehicle occupants hanging out car windows and shooting guns and fireworks have been captured on video and have gone viral online, adding to the allure.
The events have been annoying and unnerving for business owners along 84th Lane in Blaine, a hot spot in the city. Several contacted by the Star Tribune confirmed the problem but declined to comment for fear of reprisal.
Last spring Blaine police, with help from other agencies, busted up a gathering of hundreds of vehicles at Metro Transit's 95th Avenue Park and Ride, a popular meeting spot where skid marks now scar the pavement.