Bosses at OverDraught are due to appear before a licensing panel at Bury Council on March 12 after Greater Manchester Police applied for another review of the venue’s licence.
The hearing comes after police said the premises remained open for a lock-in until after 5am on December 20, despite its licence only allowing alcohol to be sold until 2.30am.
The bar’s premises licence has already been subject to two expedited reviews and full hearings in just under two years following incidents of serious crime and disorder.
The most recent review took place on December 3, 2025, when the licensing sub-committee imposed additional conditions on the bar following concerns about a pool cue attack last November.
This incident followed separate violent disorder issues at the venue, including a knife incident in January 2024, a man being ‘bottled’ in March 2025, and a toilet attack in June last year.
Amended conditions included locking away pool cues and balls after 10pm and enforcing plastic cups rather than glasses after 9pm.
Police say those conditions appeared to have been followed in the run-up to Christmas after several checks.
However, officers later received information suggesting the bar had stayed open late to show a boxing fight between Jake Paul and Anthony Joshua in the lead-up to Christmas.
No Temporary Event Notice had been submitted to allow extended hours, GMP said.
PC Peter Eccleston from GMP contacted the licence holder and designated premises supervisor Alistair Johnson in January.
During the conversation, Mr Johnson said that once most customers had left at closing time, he locked the doors and allowed “two or three” friends to remain to watch the fight.
But CCTV evidence later supplied to police suggested a larger number of people were still inside the venue and that alcohol continued to be served.
A still image from the venue’s CCTV system taken at 3.27am showed at least 12 people inside with “an assortment of glasses, predominantly pint glasses at varying levels of volume”, visible on tables.
Further CCTV reviewed by police showed drinks being served over the bar at 2.50am and again after 3am, with additional sales recorded after 4.30am.
The footage also showed several people smoking inside the premises, including at 4.42am.
The last customer was seen leaving shortly after 5.14am, with staff and the designated premises supervisor leaving minutes later.
In the report to councillors, police said Mr Johnson acknowledged several people remained inside the bar and admitted supplying alcohol to family members, staff and friends.
However, officers said the activity breached the premises licence.
PC Eccleston said the bar owner had “knowingly undermined the licensing objectives” despite having more than 15 years’ experience in the trade.
Police said the circumstances were particularly concerning given the bar’s recent licensing history.
The venue has already faced scrutiny following the violent incidents, including an attack involving a pool cue that previously prompted calls for its licence to be revoked before conditions were tightened.
The force says Mr Johnson was “pleading with PC Eccleston” not to review the licence and said he “allowed the sale of alcohol due to being closed on some of the key dates over the Christmas period, and as such, wanted to bring in some extra revenue to help cover the shortfall”.
PC Eccleston added: “Given the serious breach of license, Greater Manchester Police feel that it is necessary to bring this incident to the attention of the Licensing Sub-Committee.
“Although Mr Johnson has openly admitted to his failings and he appears to be taking full responsibility, given that the premises have had two expedited reviews in just over two years, you would expect a very different approach from someone with his experience.”
Councillors will now decide whether further action should be taken against the premises licence when the panel meets next week.