Puddle of Mudd frontman Wes Scantlin was booked at an area jail on Wednesday (July thirty first) on an impressive warrant and for resisting arrest, stemming from an incident wherein he allegedly refused to get out of his automobile and was subsequently pepper-balled by a SWAT workforce.
In line with TMZ, Scantlin was pulled over in his black Hummer H2 in Burbank, California, for a visitors cease, and when officers discovered that the rocker had an impressive warrant for possessing a weapon at an airport, they requested him to get out of the automobile.
Scantlin apparently refused to exit the car, at which level a disaster negotiator was known as. Officers then tried to make use of pepper spray on the singer-guitarist, however that didn’t work both. At that time, they known as in a SWAT workforce, which promptly broke one of many automobile home windows and shot non-lethal pepper balls to lastly get the musician to exit his automobile.
After being taken to an area hospital to flush out his eyes, Scantlin was booked at an area jail and launched. A court docket date has been set for August twentieth.
Scantlin has a protracted historical past of run-ins with the legislation, together with an arrest for trespassing final 12 months. Previous to that, he confronted one other trespassing cost in 2016 for an incident on the similar home, which he purchased in 2005 for $1.7 million however misplaced to foreclosures roughly 10 years later.
The Puddle of Mudd singer was additionally arrested for attempting to convey a BB gun on board a flight at LAX in 2017 (presumably the incident for which he had the excellent warrant), and for taking a joyride on a baggage carousel in Denver in 2015.
The frontman has additionally had quite a few breakdowns onstage, and as soon as infamously butchered a canopy of Nirvana’s “A few Lady,” later admitting that the efficiency “appeared and gave the impression of complete shit.”
Puddle of Mudd launched a string of hits within the early 2000s, together with “Blurry” (an acceptable tune selection for this newest incident), “She Hates Me,” “Drift & Die,” and “Psycho.” Early this 12 months, “Blurry” made Consequence‘s listing of the 50 greatest post-grunge songs.