Monday, April 20, 2026

Shut out of Washington Square Park, 4/20 celebration descends on Tompkins

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

Vendors arriving this morning for the annual 4/20 gathering at Washington Square Park were met with barricades and bag checks, according to East Village-based artist Delphine LeGoff (below in Tompkins today), who was there to sell her work.
"The perimeter of the park was barricaded by the NYPD completely, so only the area by the arch was accessible," she said. "They were checking bags, and no equipment or merchandise was allowed in — not even for artists." 

She added that officers were polite and told people, "Don't go to Union Square — just go to Tompkins."

By late morning, activity had shifted to Tompkins Square Park, the site of the first unofficial smoke-in in NYC history in June 1967. 

Around 11 a.m., EVG began receiving reports of vendors setting up marijuana tents, food stands, and art tables, along with a growing crowd and a party-like atmosphere.
Police soon made their way through the park, telling vendors that no tables, vending or smoking (of any kind) would be allowed. 

The message, at least initially, was framed as a warning.
A few hours later, a larger police presence arrived, effectively shutting things down.
An NYPD official said the goal was voluntary compliance, noting that any enforcement would likely result in civil summonses rather than criminal charges. 

Another source described the situation as "pretty chill," with no arrests or summonses as of 4:30 p.m.

Some vendors said they would pivot to giving items away to avoid violating vending rules. Others voiced frustration, saying they would prefer a legal pathway to operate. "We want a license," said one participant from Long Island. "This could be tax revenue for New York." 

Licensed cannabis operators were also on hand, some expressing concern that unregulated activity undermines their businesses while they remain bound by strict rules. 

By 4:20 p.m., the traditional moment was still marked — with plenty of smoke drifting across the park.

All told, it remained a relatively low-key scene. While police ultimately moved to shut down the event, the NYPD did so without force, and there were no reports of injuries or arrests. Officers were largely polite and low-key, and participants, for their part, kept things respectful.

For a gathering that had the potential to go sideways, it never did.

Here are scenes from the morning and early afternoon in Tompkins...

17 comments:

Anonymous said...

What's the point of still continuing using 420 after it became legal?

Anonymous said...

F*ck the police

Anonymous said...

Not a smoker of anything or a fan off 420, but whatever floats your boat. To each their own. This event seems harmless.

Chris Flash said...

I know at least two marijuana rights activists who applied for permits in Washington Square Park for this event for today - both applications were DENIED.

When park permits are denied, folks are going to do what they want to do regardless, usually leaving a big mess behind, as happened today.

I must say that the 9th precinct cops were pretty cool. They all know that trying to stop this peaceful event is a waste of time....

Anonymous said...

Wish I had known that Ms. LeGoff was selling her art and crafts in TSPark today. She is a wonderful artist. I love what she does.

Anonymous said...

It’s a stoner’s holiday duh! Legal or not

Anonymous said...

lol

Anonymous said...

wtf was the cops problem, exactly?

Anonymous said...

It has been reported elsewhere that this was the Nypd throwing a hissy fit over snowballs. Bunch of babies.

Anonymous said...

Thank you!❤️

Anonymous said...

Just pick up your trash already people !!!!

Neighbor said...

It's so dumb that the city/state don't fight all of the non-licensed sales. That hurts the people spending real money to actually get licenses and physical spaces AND hurts the city/state from a tax perspective.

Anonymous said...

As a life-long smoker, I enjoy smoke-free parks. Feel free to smoke on the street, DON'T SMOKE IN THE PARKS!

Anonymous said...

OMG, SO MUCH THIS! I don't understand why nobody is mentioning that parks are smoke-free. We have so little green space downtown where we can get some fresh air.

Patapsco Jones said...

So NYPD can come out in force to stop people from smoking a legal drug but they can't lift a finger to stop the hundreds of junkies and drug dealers buying, selling and using fentanyl and various other opiates and God knows what else around our community?

Anonymous said...

Thank you for saying. I agree.

Anonymous said...

The only issues I had were; had to stay home working all day, quit smoking recently to give my lungs a break and couldn’t partake, and all the trash left behind in the park. People and park employees did a great job of cleaning up the trash left behind, though.