Rapper TI was 'wrongfully arrested' outside his gated community, attorney says
Atlanta rapper and actor T.I., who reinvented himself as an activist and political force after time in federal prison and years of trouble with the law, was arrested early Wednesday outside his gated community in Henry County, authorities said.
RELATED: T.I.’s civic work has brought hope to students, single moms, inmates
The music star, whose legal name is Clifford Harris Jr., was arrested after returning to the Eagle’s Landing Country Club community in the 100 block of Eagle’s Landing Way around 4 a.m.
T.I. did not have his key and argued with a security guard who would not grant him access, Henry County police said. At some point, the rapper called a friend who eventually joined him.
T.I. was arrested on misdemeanor charges of simple assault, disorderly conduct and public drunkenness. His friend, Marquinarius Holmes, 40, of Stockbridge, was arrested on outstanding charges out of Clayton County and for not having proof of car insurance, the sheriff’s office told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
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T.I. was released from the Henry County Jail about 8 a.m. Wednesday after posting $2,250 bond. He did not appear before a judge.
T.I. was arrested early Wednesday outside his gated Henry County community. (Credit: Henry County Sheriff’s Office)
In a statement to The AJC, attorney Steve Sadow said T.I. “was wrongfully arrested” and accused the guard of refusing him entry into his own home after the superstar’s wife confirmed he “should be let in immediately.”
BREAKING: Just got this from T.I’s attorney about this morning’s arrest pic.twitter.com/1XslGVXxHx
— Tyisha Fernandes (@TyishaWSB) May 16, 2018
According to Sadow, police were not interested in hearing T.I.’s side of the story when they arrived on the scene and “wrongfully chose to end the situation by arresting” him. Henry police have not addressed the comments from T.I.’s attorney.
T.I.’s past encounters with the law are well-documented.
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U.S. District Judge Charles Pannell Jr. sentenced him to a year and a day in prison for an October 2007 incident in which T.I sent a bodyguard to purchase machine guns and silencers.
The extraordinary deal shaved nearly four years off a potential sentence, provided T.I. perform 1,000 hours of community service. The service included visits with schoolchildren to speak out against violence, gangs and drugs.
T.I. finished his time in prison and a halfway house and was still on probation when he was arrested Sept. 1, 2010, in Los Angeles.
He and his wife, R&B singer Tameka “Tiny” Cottle, were taken into custody during a traffic stop in West Hollywood in which deputies said they smelled a strong odor of marijuana from inside the car. They were soon released on bond.
Then-U.S. Attorney Sally Yates said she supported the initial deal and believed T.I. had reached large numbers of youth. But Yates told Pannell the rapper already had submitted two diluted urine samples before his arrest and initially lied to a probation officer about the five pills of Ecstasy found in his pocket when he was arrested. After his arrest, Harris tested positive for opiates, Yates said. Pannell sentenced him in October 2010 to 11 more months in prison.
After his release, T.I. turned his life around.
He became the face of a protest against alleged discriminatory practices at Houston’s, the now-shuttered Lenox Road restaurant.
MORE: T.I. ends feud with Houston’s
He lent his voice and celebrity to discussions about a growing number of police shootings of unarmed black men.
He was one of numerous celebrities who stumped for Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms during a bitter runoff with opponent Mary Norwood. Bottoms later appointed T.I. to her transition team.
ALSO: Atlanta rappers T.I., Killer Mike named to mayor’s diverse transition team
And he was the star of a successful VH1 reality show for six seasons. “T.I. and Tiny: The Family Hustle” chronicled the superstar’s life at home with Cottle and their blended family. The show’s final episode aired last year.
RELATED: VH1’s “T.I. and Tiny: The Family Hustle” returns for sixth and final season April 17
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— Please return to AJC.com for updates.
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