Sacramento’s Sumer Nights Closed After Cockroach Reinspection

When a Sacramento restaurant fails a health inspection on a Tuesday, the Sacramento County Environmental Management Department doesn’t just walk away — they come back on Wednesday to see if anything changed. In the case of Sumer Nights, the Iraqi and Mediterranean restaurant on Watt Avenue that reviewers have been calling one of their favorite spots in the city, Wednesday’s reinspection did not go well. Inspectors found cockroaches in the kitchen. The red placard went up. The facility is closed.

What the Reinspection Found

The closure, entered March 26, 2026, came during a follow-up visit designed to verify that the restaurant had addressed major violations flagged in a routine inspection the day before, according to the official report from the Sacramento County Environmental Management Department. Instead of finding corrections, inspector M. Rodriguez found live cockroaches — and the report notes this as a repeat violation, meaning the cockroach problem had already been flagged before.

The specifics from the report are not abstract. Inspectors documented one live nymph cockroach on the wall above the warewashing sink, one live nymph on the wall below that same sink, and one live nymph on the wall above the steam table at the cook’s line. Then there’s the detail that doesn’t require much elaboration: ten dead juvenile cockroaches on the piece of tape holding up a handwashing sign at the warewashing sink. That is not a marginal infestation. That is cockroaches living, dying, and accumulating on the infrastructure of an active kitchen.

The closure was issued under California Health and Safety Code Section 114259.1, which requires all food facilities to be kept free of vermin. To reopen, Sumer Nights must bring in professional pest control, clean and sanitize all food contact and preparation areas, and seal the structural gaps that are letting insects in — including a roof access point with a gap wider than a quarter inch that had already been flagged on a prior inspection and still wasn’t closed.

The Repeat Violations Tell a Longer Story

What’s striking about the reinspection report isn’t just that cockroaches were still present — it’s how many violations on the sheet are labeled repeat or second repeat. The missing paper towel dispenser at the server station handwashing sink: second repeat violation. The mop sink lacking an anti-siphon device on its hose connection: second repeat violation. The outdoor bug zapper stored inside the dining area: repeat violation. The roof access gap: repeat violation…

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