Incident Overview · Record Store Riot
Depeche ModeWherehouse Records
On 20 March 1990, Depeche Mode’s promotional signing for Violator at The Wherehouse on La Cienega overwhelmed the store and surrounding streets. Police shut down the event after crowd surges, minor vandalism and a large public safety response.
What happened
Storefront Overload
A promotional record-store appearance turned into a major crowd-control incident after attendance far exceeded the practical capacity of the venue and surrounding street space.
Depeche Mode appeared for a Violator promotional signing arranged with KROQ-FM and Sire/Reprise. The store appearance quickly overwhelmed the site, with fans filling the streets around La Cienega and Third.
Contemporary reporting describes crowd surges, minor vandalism, disruption to nearby streets, and a large police deployment in riot gear. The event was shut down by police a little over an hour after the scheduled 9 p.m. start.
The most reliable picture is that the incident caused injuries but no reported fatalities. The exact crowd figure, injury total and police deployment numbers vary by source.
View disputed details →Quick View
Incident Highlights
Chronology
Known Sequence
Promotion arranged
The signing was organized around Depeche Mode’s Violator release with KROQ-FM and Sire/Reprise linked to the promotion.
Fans gather early
Official archive material says fans lined up for days before the event, with crowds building heavily before the scheduled 9 p.m. start.
Street crowd overwhelms site
Contemporary and later reports describe thousands in the area, blocked streets, crowd surges and damage around the store.
Police shut down signing
The event was stopped after the turnout became unsafe. Reports describe LAPD officers in riot gear and a major response.
Aftermath and reimbursement
Wherehouse later agreed to reimburse the city for estimated response costs of $20,000 to $25,000.
Operational Picture
What Is Solid
Date and site are strong
Sources consistently place the incident on 20 March 1990 at The Wherehouse on La Cienega in Los Angeles.
Crowd scale is disputed
Contemporary sources give lower figures than later official and retrospective accounts.
Injury wording varies
Four people transported and seven injured can both be true, but the sources do not reconcile them.
Police response was large
Reports mention about 100 officers in one article and more than 130 officers in later coverage.
Conflicting Information
What Does Not Fully Line Up
Disputed Detail
Crowd size
Reported crowd figures vary sharply across contemporary, official archive and retrospective sources.
Editorial note: the lower figures appear in early contemporary reporting, while higher figures appear in later articles and retrospective material.
Disputed Detail
Injury count
Sources differ between people transported to hospital and total people hurt.
Editorial note: these are not necessarily contradictions, but the source file does not provide one reconciled final total.
Disputed Detail
Exact place naming
Sources use different wording for the same store area.
Editorial note: the references appear to describe the same site area, but the wording is inconsistent.
Unverified Details
Final crowd total
No single final figure is verified across the reviewed sources.
Final injury total
The document does not reconcile four transported with seven injured.
Arrest count
No reliable sourced arrest figure was confirmed.
Fatalities
No fatalities were reported in the reviewed sources.
Facebook date
The exact posting date was not verified because the page did not fully render.
Police total
Sources mention about 100 and more than 130, but no single final number is confirmed.
References
Source Cards
Los Angeles Times Archives
Depeche Mode Fans Become Unruly at Store
21 March 1990
Contemporary report stating about 100 LAPD officers in riot gear responded after fans became unruly at the La Cienega Boulevard store. It reports more than 2,000 fans, four people transported to Cedars-Sinai, and no serious injuries.
Visit Source →Los Angeles Times Archives
Wherehouse Asked to Pay City Over Mob Scene
22 March 1990
Follow-up stating more than 130 officers in riot gear were needed to disperse at least 5,000 fans. It reports seven injuries, including a teenage girl who was trampled.
Visit Source →Los Angeles Times Archives
Store to Reimburse City for Depeche Mode Ruckus
23 March 1990
Reports Wherehouse Entertainment agreed to reimburse Los Angeles for an estimated $20,000 to $25,000 in response costs. It gives the store location as 100 N. La Cienega Blvd. and reports seven people hurt.
Visit Source →Los Angeles Times
The Legion of Depeche Mode
1 April 1990
Feature on the band’s Southern California following, useful for understanding the strength and scale of the fanbase shortly after the incident.
Visit Source →Los Angeles Times Archives
Los Angeles: Firm Pays for Unruly Fans
2 August 1990
Later report confirming Wherehouse paid the city after the incident. It repeats more than 130 police in riot gear, at least 5,000 fans, and seven people hurt.
Visit Source →Beverly Press & Park Labrea News
VINTAGE: Depeche Mode attracts big crowd to Wherehouse records store
6 August 2020
Local retrospective placing the former store at the Beverly Connection and stating more than 17,000 fans showed up at La Cienega Boulevard and Third Street, with four taken to hospitals.
Visit Source →OC Weekly
Poorman’s Radio Days: Recounting the Depeche Mode Riot of 1990
17 September 2019
First-person retrospective from a KROQ personality involved in the promotion. It names KROQ-FM, Mute Records, and The Wherehouse, and recalls expectations of 10,000 people for a store unable to hold more than 150.
Visit Source →Louder
The night Depeche Mode caused a riot in LA and became a national sensation
2025
Later retrospective using band and associate quotes. It says estimates suggested over 10,000 fans, with Martin Gore quoted on official estimates of about 15,000.
Visit Source →Depeche Mode: The Archives
The Wherehouse In-Store
20 March 1990 page date
Official archive feature stating Sire/Reprise and KROQ-FM organized the signing at The Wherehouse at 3rd and La Cienega. It says well over 10,000 fans had crowded the streets by the 9 p.m. start before police shut it down.
Visit Source →Depeche Mode: The Archives
audio / radio
March 1990 listings
Official archive page preserving related radio material, including the commercial for the in-store, a Richard Blade broadcast about the incident, and the later apology cassette commercial.
Visit Source →YouTube / Daniel Barassi
Depeche Mode - The Wherehouse In-Store (March 18-22, 1990)
20 March 2021
Fan-shot footage upload described as original camcorder footage from the event and surrounding days. Useful as visual open-source material, but treated as later source material.
Visit Source →Facebook / Depeche Mode
Official Depeche Mode Facebook post commemorating 20 March 1990
Posting date not fully visible
Public search snippet describes the Wherehouse event and says police called it a near riot. The page did not fully render, so this is not used for core facts.
Visit Source →Source Links
Open Source Banners
Los Angeles Times Archives
Depeche Mode Fans Become Unruly at Store
21 March 1990
Contemporary report stating about 100 LAPD officers in riot gear responded after fans became unruly at the La Cienega Boulevard store. It reports more than 2,000 fans, four people transported to Cedars-Sinai, and no serious injuries.
Open →Los Angeles Times Archives
Wherehouse Asked to Pay City Over Mob Scene
22 March 1990
Follow-up stating more than 130 officers in riot gear were needed to disperse at least 5,000 fans. It reports seven injuries, including a teenage girl who was trampled.
Open →Los Angeles Times Archives
Store to Reimburse City for Depeche Mode Ruckus
23 March 1990
Reports Wherehouse Entertainment agreed to reimburse Los Angeles for an estimated $20,000 to $25,000 in response costs. It gives the store location as 100 N. La Cienega Blvd. and reports seven people hurt.
Open →Los Angeles Times
The Legion of Depeche Mode
1 April 1990
Feature on the band’s Southern California following, useful for understanding the strength and scale of the fanbase shortly after the incident.
Open →Los Angeles Times Archives
Los Angeles: Firm Pays for Unruly Fans
2 August 1990
Later report confirming Wherehouse paid the city after the incident. It repeats more than 130 police in riot gear, at least 5,000 fans, and seven people hurt.
Open →Beverly Press & Park Labrea News
VINTAGE: Depeche Mode attracts big crowd to Wherehouse records store
6 August 2020
Local retrospective placing the former store at the Beverly Connection and stating more than 17,000 fans showed up at La Cienega Boulevard and Third Street, with four taken to hospitals.
Open →OC Weekly
Poorman’s Radio Days: Recounting the Depeche Mode Riot of 1990
17 September 2019
First-person retrospective from a KROQ personality involved in the promotion. It names KROQ-FM, Mute Records, and The Wherehouse, and recalls expectations of 10,000 people for a store unable to hold more than 150.
Open →Louder
The night Depeche Mode caused a riot in LA and became a national sensation
2025
Later retrospective using band and associate quotes. It says estimates suggested over 10,000 fans, with Martin Gore quoted on official estimates of about 15,000.
Open →Depeche Mode: The Archives
The Wherehouse In-Store
20 March 1990 page date
Official archive feature stating Sire/Reprise and KROQ-FM organized the signing at The Wherehouse at 3rd and La Cienega. It says well over 10,000 fans had crowded the streets by the 9 p.m. start before police shut it down.
Open →Depeche Mode: The Archives
audio / radio
March 1990 listings
Official archive page preserving related radio material, including the commercial for the in-store, a Richard Blade broadcast about the incident, and the later apology cassette commercial.
Open →YouTube / Daniel Barassi
Depeche Mode - The Wherehouse In-Store (March 18-22, 1990)
20 March 2021
Fan-shot footage upload described as original camcorder footage from the event and surrounding days. Useful as visual open-source material, but treated as later source material.
Open →Facebook / Depeche Mode
Official Depeche Mode Facebook post commemorating 20 March 1990
Posting date not fully visible
Public search snippet describes the Wherehouse event and says police called it a near riot. The page did not fully render, so this is not used for core facts.
Open →