Two illegal "quarantine raves" held over the weekend were "almost impossible" to prevent after organisers changed the venues at last minute, a chief constable said on Monday
Greater Manchester Police's Ian Hopkins described the behaviour of those who attended the illegal gatherings as "appalling".
"The location was changed and that made it very difficult [to stop]", the chief constable said.
"Once these things start it is almost impossible to stop them given the number of people that were there and the number of officers available".
He said that the situation would have been "very serious" and many people "including my officers, would have been badly injured I believe", he said.
Hopkins explained that this was why officers on the ground decided not to try to stop the events.
"Some of the behaviour was appalling; some of this was not partying - this was people going out of their way to commit crime", he added.
Both events held on Saturday evening were illegal under coronavirus lockdown restrictions but Greater Manchester Police restricted their interventions to "careful monitoring".
The gatherings held at Daisy Nook Country Park, Failsworth, and Carrington, Greater Manchester saw around 6,000 people in attendence.
A 20-year-old man died of what is suspected to be a drug overdose at the Daisy Nook rave. At Carrington, a woman was raped and three people were stabbed.
Major Incident At Secret Carrington (Manchester) & Daisy Nook (Oldham) Rave https://t.co/fayrKlwp5f via @YouTube #daisynook #Carrington #COVID19 #coronavirus pic.twitter.com/8QXw3wgAkx
— Gangster_times (@gangster_times) June 14, 2020
One 22-year old secret raver spoke to BBC's 5 Live explaining that he attended after following lockdown guidelines "for three months".
"I've not been around a group of people in a long time so I thought I might as well this week", said Matt, who did not provide a surname.
"I just went for a good time", he said.
When asked about the coronavirus pandemic he said that he isn't "really scared of the virus" but also did not know anyone who had bee infected "so I didn't think of that".
Current guidelines in England permit groups of up to six people of households to gather outside in parks or private gardens so long as 2-meter social distancing rules are abided by.