
Ugly new 'solution' unveiled at Seattle beach judge ordered to close because nudists kept having sex in public
But just a day after city officials installed the massive green eyesore at Denny Blaine Park, it was vandalized.
Denny Blaine Park has been a nudist hot spot for over 50 years and is particularly popular among the LGBTQ community.
But the waterfront area is not specifically designated by Seattle Parks and Recreation as a clothing-optional park, it only became so unofficially.
Over the last few years, residents in the Denny Blaine area have made an alarming observation - there has been an increasing amount of lewd behavior out in the open.
Concerned neighbors organized a group, Denny Blaine Park for All, to combat the issue and even filed a lawsuit against the city to get the situation under control.
Last month, King County Superior Court Judge Samuel Chung gave the city two weeks to put a stop to the sickening activity or he would completely shut it down.
Denny Blaine Park wrote in a statement at the time that Chung's decision 'confirms the city has failed to stop ongoing illegal activity at Denny Blaine Park - including public sex and masturbation, indecent exposure, and lewd conduct.'
On Wednesday, the City of Seattle attempted to fulfill Chung's orders by building a four-foot-tall chain-linked fence covered in a dark green tarp.
The barrier was 'put up in accordance with a court-ordered plan submitted related to nuisance behavior at Denny Blaine Park,' Seattle Parks and Recreation spokesperson Rachel Schulkin told The Chronicle.
Schulkin explained the opaque fence was designed to segment the area into three distinctive sections.
The beach and lawn sections are the designated 'clothing-optional areas,' while the rest of the park is not.
A sign was also added with rules for the park, with one bullet point reading: 'Clothing required west of fence.'
It also states that drugs, alcohol and smoking are outlawed on the premise.
While the city thought this would be an ideal solution to the indecent dilemma, the quick fix was proven unsuccessful by the next morning.
Seattle police reported that around 11am on Thursday, a man had ripped off portions of the privacy tarp meant to block the view into the beach.
Pieces of the tarp missing from the bare wire fencing were found on top of a nearby portable toilet.
A witness who filmed the man in action claimed she recognized him as someone who often visits the nude beach, police said.
The suspect, a man in his 30s or 40s, was recognized by several locals and allegedly lives in a tent by the beach, KIRO 7 reported.
Schulkin told The Chronicle the damage to the fence was repaired on Friday morning.
In extended efforts to crack down on crime in the park, city officials have proposed placing security cameras in the area.
But critics say the fence is just concealing an underlying issue at the park.
Conservative commentator at Seattle Red Jason Rantz wrote: 'The intent is to shield the clothing-optional zone near the lake from view and curb the visibility of perverts having sex or masturbating in public.
'It does not, however, stop the underlying lewd behavior at the center of a lawsuit alleging the city has done virtually nothing to stop the public sex.'
While Denny Blaine Park for All has provided the city with video evidence of several instances of people having sex at the beach, the plan to tame the space has received pushback from members of Seattle's LGBTQ community and advocates.
Seattle City Attorney Ann Davison, who fought against the motion to close down the park, argued that the 'queer nude space has a social utility.'
A group called Friends of Denny Blaine has also been formed to support the park staying open.
At an event hosted last week, organizer Hope Frejie asserted: 'We don't need permission from the city to be naked.
'Queer people, trans people, need a place to be, because it's not safe for us everywhere.'
According to Capitol Hill Seattle, co-organizer Jackie Donovan said 'the courts can say what they want, because f**k it, we're getting naked.'
Friends of Denny Blaine previously said that Chung's ruling 'erroneously links harassment and other misconduct to general nude usage of the park.'
'An enormously overwhelming majority of nude usage of the beach by thousands of Seattleites each year is friendly, legal, and positive,' the group wrote.
'Our aim is to ensure the case, and the city's response, focuses solely on actual criminal activity - public masturbation and sexual harassment - which cannot be conflated with mere nudity,' the statement continued, adding that non-sexual nudity is protected free expression under the First Amendment.
Friends of Denny Blaine says the group has been working with park users, the parks department, Seattle police and neighbors to handle issues arising at the park.
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