Updated
Updated · NBC News · Jul 3
Brockton Imposes 10 p.m. Curfew for Cape Verde Match After 9 Shooting Injuries
Updated
Updated · NBC News · Jul 3

Brockton Imposes 10 p.m. Curfew for Cape Verde Match After 9 Shooting Injuries

3 articles · Updated · NBC News · Jul 3

Summary

  • Brockton will enforce a temporary safety curfew from 10 p.m. Friday to 5 a.m. Saturday for Cape Verde’s World Cup knockout match against Argentina, with alcohol venue entry barred after 7 p.m. and last call at 9:30 p.m.
  • At least nine people were injured in shootings tied to recent postgame gatherings, and others were hurt in stabbings, after thousands celebrated Cape Verde’s first-ever World Cup run in downtown streets.
  • Police said the department is understaffed despite deploying more than 200 officers during recent celebrations and relying on state police, the county sheriff and neighboring departments.
  • City officials also requested National Guard assistance, though they did not say whether it had been approved; exemptions cover first responders, workers, medical travel and protected First Amendment activity.

Insights

How did Brockton's World Cup joy turn so dangerous that it now requires a city-wide curfew?
Is a city lockdown the new normal for managing large-scale public celebrations in American cities?
Can a curfew contain the passion of a historic match, or will it simply push the chaos elsewhere?