Country singer sentenced after throwing chair off Nashville bar roof
- Published
Country music star Morgan Wallen has been sentenced to two years' probation after throwing a chair from the roof of a Tennessee bar.
The I Had Some Help singer must also spend seven days at an education centre for driving under the influence after he pleaded guilty to two counts of reckless endangerment.
The 31-year-old was arrested after throwing a chair on 7 April this year from the roof of the six-storey Chief's bar, which is owned by fellow Country star Eric Church. The seat plummeted to Broadway - a major thoroughfare of bars and music venues in the heart of Nashville.
Wallen is best known for his chart-topping song Last Night from his award-winning album One Thing at a Time and for his early success on the NBC show The Voice.
The chair-throwing incident took place as Chief's celebrated its opening weekend.
Wallen was booked into jail a day later and subsequently released.
He apologised for the incident on social media.
"I've touched base with Nashville law enforcement, my family, and the good people at Chief'," he wrote on social media.
"I'm not proud of my behavior, and I accept responsibility."
It was not Wallen's first brush with the law.
He was previously arrested in May 2020 for public intoxication and disorderly conduct outside Kid Rock's honky-tonk bar in the entertainment district, The Tennessean newspaper reported.
In 2021, he made headlines after he was caught on video shouting a racial slur outside his Tennessee home.
That incident resulted in the loss of his recording contract. He was dropped from country radio stations and suspended form the Country Music Awards for three years.
Wallen later apologised for his actions. "There's no excuse. I've never made an excuse. I never will make an excuse," he told Billboard magazine in an interview.
Despite these controversies, he was named entertainer of the year at last month's CMA awards.
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