YouTube
star Jake Paul's Los Angeles-area home raided by
FBI
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[August 06, 2020]
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES
(Reuters) - FBI agents in tactical gear on
Wednesday raided the Los Angeles-area mansion
home of YouTube star and social media influencer
Jake Paul in an investigation stemming from a
looting spree at an upscale shopping mall in
Scottsdale, Arizona, officials said. |
The Federal Bureau of
Investigation also searched two locations in Las
Vegas, but no one was taken into custody during
the raids and no arrest warrant has been issued
for Paul, the agency said.
Paul, 23, was not present when his home was
searched, according to Laura Eimiller, an FBI
spokeswoman in Los Angeles.
Paul's lawyer, Richard Schonfeld, in a statement
acknowledged that his client's home was searched
and promised cooperation with the investigation.
Paul, whose viral YouTube video postings of
provocative pranks have won him millions of
followers, had no comment on his Twitter and
Instagram accounts.
An FBI spokeswoman in Phoenix, Brooke Brennan,
said agents were "investigating allegations of
criminal acts surrounding the incident at
Scottsdale Fashion Square in May." She declined
further comment because the search warrant was
under court seal.
Local news video footage from the raid showed
officers removing several rifles from Paul's
mansion in Calabasas, about 30 miles northwest
of Los Angeles.
Scottsdale police said separately that
misdemeanor charges filed in June accusing Paul
of criminal trespass and unlawful assembly in
connection with the Fashion Square "riots" were
dismissed on Wednesday in conjunction with the
federal probe.
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Misdemeanor charges from that
incident were likewise dropped against two men
police described as Paul's associates, one of
them a Las Vegas nightclub promoter.
Police said dismissal of those charges was tied
to completing the federal investigation, adding
that prosecutors could refile the case if
warranted.
Civil disturbances in Scottsdale on May 30 grew
out of demonstrations triggered by the George
Floyd killing that week. Police said Paul took
part in the unrest and was present after the
protest was declared an unlawful assembly. He
also was accused of illegally entering the
shopping mall and remaining inside after it was
closed.
Paul denied that he or anyone with him took part
in looting or vandalism, and said he was
"documenting, not engaging" in, lawlessness.
(Reporting and writing by Steve Gorman in Los
Angeles; Additional reporting by Jill Serjeant
in Los Angeles and David Schwartz in Phoenix;
editing by Bill Tarrant and Leslie Adler)
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