Music community reacts to Jovita’s drug bust
To view our videos, you need to
enable JavaScript. Learn how.
install Adobe Flash 9 or above. Install now.
Then come back here and refresh the page.
Eighteen people are under arrest and 15 are facing federal indictments in connection to a South Austin heroin ring that shut down a popular South First street restaurant.
The FBI says Jovita's was a base for the Texas Syndicate Prison Gang.
Officers say it was run by the restaurant's owner, Amado "Mayo" Pardo. News of the drug bust came as a shock to residents of South First Street after a dramatic drug bust Thursday morning, but it's also making an impact on the music community.
"You know it's tough enough for musicians to make a living at their passion, and for a venue to be shut down for something that could have been prevented, that's a shame," Kull said.
For 20 years, Jovita's has hosted music six nights a week. Two bands were scheduled to play Thursday night.
Jovita Pardo, who the restaurant is named after, says she will do everything she can to reopen the business.