This year’s Mifflin Street Block Party ended on an unsettling note as the crowds swelled to record numbers, bottles and cases of beer flooded the street and police said two partygoers were stabbed.
While the stabbings were unrelated and occurred about two hours apart, both victims were sent to a local hospital.
The first stabbing occurred around 5:12 p.m. on the 500 block of Mifflin. A 21-year-old University of Wisconsin student was hospitalized with multiple life-threatening stab wounds, according to a Madison Police report. His name had not been released Sunday.
At the time of the stabbing, three men were observed fleeing the scene, and police believed one of them to be the suspect. The 22-year-old suspect listed a Green Bay address and was later arrested along with the two accomplices who police found a block away with bloodstained clothing, said Ald. Mike Verveer, District 4.
“The extremely serious stabbing really cast a giant cloud over this year’s event,” Verveer said.
Verveer said police told him late Saturday that the victim would fully recover from his injuries.
Another drunk partygoer was taken to the hospital after being stabbed in the buttocks on the 400-block of Mifflin Street, MPD Lieutenant Dave McCaw said. The victim told officers he was stabbed and police are still investigating, as there were no witnesses at the scene.
As of 9 p.m. Saturday, police made 160 arrests, the report said.
Despite the rough ending to the event, the day appeared to start off well. The sky was clear, the sun streamed in and out and the thunderstorms students were dreadfully expecting failed to make an appearance.
Partiers older than 21 were allowed to carry open intoxicants in the street for the first time since the 1990s, as the event found a new sponsor with Majestic Theaters, which co-sponsored with Capitol Neighborhood, Inc. Students carried cases of beer down the street while others took pulls from plastic bottles of vodka.
“This is the easy portion of [Mifflin],” McCaw said around 11:30 a.m.
At the beginning of the day, McCaw said MPD’s biggest concern was overcrowded balconies.
But as time continued and the alcohol flow increased, the arrests grew and police officers suffered more injuries than in recent years.
Verveer said three officers were taken to the hospital and later released. One officer received a black eye after being punched in the face when trying to stop a student carrying a bottle.
The MPD report said two other officers were injured while trying to apprehend a partygoer. One suffered bruised ribs and the other, a leg injury.
Verveer said overall he expects city officials to try to make major changes to the event, including potentially shutting it down.
“In no way can I see the city supportive of alcohol in the streets again at this event,” Verveer said. “It obviously did not work. It’s an experiment that failed.”
By early afternoon, Verveer said the event was the most crowded he had ever seen after attending block parties for many years, most likely because of the cooperative weather. At that point, navigating the streets became a challenge for attendees, as stumbling students were packed shoulder-to-shoulder throughout Mifflin Street.
By mid-afternoon, McCaw said people appeared to be “hammered out of their skulls” after police broke up four house parties. He said officers had been transporting people to detox all day, with more than 20 partygoers compared to the previous year’s five.
Verveer said the lifting of the open intoxicant ban likely led to unintended consequences, like partygoers feeling they could get away with anything, including the stabbing, since the rules were relaxed.
City officials hoped allowing open intoxicants and the selling of beer would change the focus of the event from binge drinking to live music and food, much like the Taste of Madison. However, allowing drinking in the street led to a plethora of carry-ins and relatively little beer sold by the event sponsors, Verveer said.
“Our goal was to get the party out of the backyard,” Verveer said. “But we realized very early on that the crowd size was way too large for [Mifflin] residences to adequately hold all these people.”


IP hash: 4bb3aa21
get rid of all the fucking out of towners that can’t handle drinking/Madison and Mifflin would be perfect
IP hash: 87e247d2
And high schoolers. I saw so many there! Go away.
IP hash: 53961e90
well who would have thought allowing drinking on the streets to be a good idea? increase the number of people attending and increase the risk of additional violence that can’t be controlled by the police because of the numbers of attendees.
IP hash: 7744d880
From a different part of the world - mifflin drunk is a Wednesday night in shanghai - I say this because I got detox last year and for the past eight months in shanghai i should have been detox every week. Way off topic but everyone should visit shanghai - btw no drinking age - open drinking - no bar time - clubs
id o miss madison!! wish i could have been there 1
IP hash: 579a6c25
Drinking in the streets was a poor idea. There’s no reason that the effects of that bad choice, and the influx of badly behaved out of town people should cause this traditional event to come to an end. We cannot let this event turn into Halloween, or worse, be cancelled. Yes, the city has no place sponsoring an event where the event is drinking. Same goes for the Majestic group. The Saturday before exams is the block party day, whether or not the city sponsors it. The police need to take the angle of protecting only public safety, by responding to violent incidents and dangerously intoxicated people only. In addition, the University dorms need to institute a no non-UW student guests during Mifflin policy. There is no reason that people from outside madison should ruin a good time for UW students.
IP hash: fce7852a
Why does it have to be a block party? Have houses on other streets have parties too. I don’t understand the appeal since it’s gotten so big
IP hash: c0e4916e
Agreed! UW Madison should institute a no guest policy at dorms just like they do over Halloween. It would definitely limit high school students and the amount of out of state students that attend. Although I did, however, love that 21+ could have open bottles, there were sooo many underage drinkers and it was absolutely impossible to walk down the street. Maybe have entrances like at Halloween and make students have their bags checked for open bottles like at football games? They could also check ID’s before hand and only 21+ could be allowed to bring alcohol - or they could prohibit hard liquor on the streets.
IP hash: 6cac3951
that’s taking away from the carefree attitude of the day though…def agree that the dorms should enforce a no guest policy.
IP hash: 5d86099a
I was drinking on the streets all day, starting at 10 AM. The entire day, I was walking by police with open beer cans / plastic cups, daring them to card me. Their failure to check if I was even of age was a little disconcerting.
IP hash: a0291297
woah. it’s 11:43 on Monday and I just woke up in a dumpster with a serious case of mudd-butt
IP hash: 6cac3951
We should collectively, as students, decline our friends places to crash next year, and take back what started as an event for us.
IP hash: 07a454eb
…this would devastate Marquette’s social scene though.
IP hash: ed7af77a
drinking on the streets was a good idea- at least the cops were able to see the drinkers if they passed out with alc. poisoning, etc. it kept the partying out in the open. all of this stuff still would have happened, just woulda been in the back yard or in a basement.
IP hash: b8763f9f
Nobody cares about shanghai.. Madison is where it’s at.
IP hash: aa7f8a2b
This free resource is a good read about getting off binge drinking:
www.howtogetoffbingedrinking.com