WASHINGTON (AP) — Chris Brown is
accused of punching a man in the face after the man said he tried to get into a
photo with the singer outside a hotel, according to police, the latest legal
trouble for the Grammy Award-winning artist.
The singer is expected to appear in
court Monday on a felony assault charge.
Another man, Christopher Hollosy, 35,
also was charged with felony assault in the altercation that started just
before 4:30 a.m. Sunday, police say. It happened near the W Hotel, not far from
the White House.
Police would not say how Hollosy and
Brown may have known each other.
The altercation began after the man
tried to get into a picture with Brown and two other people, according to his
account in the police report, which also quotes the man as saying Brown told
him, "I'm not down with that gay s---" and "I feel like
boxing." The exact context of Brown's remarks was not immediately clear.
The man told police Brown punched
him in the face, and police say the area around his nose was swollen and
bruised. Another man stepped between them and also punched the man, identified
as Isaac Parker, 20, of Beltsville, Md., before grabbing Brown by the arm and
leading him onto a tour bus, according to the report.
Parker was released Sunday from a
hospital. He did not immediately respond Monday to a message left at a number
listed for him, and a man at his home declined to talk with reporters.
Brown and Hollosy were being held
pending a court hearing Monday.
The two men are not named in the
police report, which refers only to "S1" and "S2" and their
ages and physical descriptions. But police department spokesman Anthony Clay
confirmed Monday that "S1" in the report's narrative referred to
Brown, while "S2" referred to Hollosy.
Neither Brown's publicists nor his
attorney Mark Geragos responded to messages left Sunday. A local lawyer for
Brown did not immediately return a message Monday seeking comment, and
Hollosy's attorney declined comment Monday ahead of the court appearance.
Abraham Luakabuanga of Tysons
Corner, Va., who runs a small limousine company, said he saw two women and a
man approach Brown after he left the hotel and begin taking photographs of the
singer. He said the situation soon devolved into a fight involving Brown and a
man who appeared to be his bodyguard. He said he heard words exchanged but
declined to give more details to avoid compromising the court case.
"I looked at Chris Brown and
was like 'Sir, why this?' he said. "To me, it was like, 'You're a star,
you have bodyguards.' Things should have been handled differently,"
Luakabuanga said.
Brown was in Washington to perform
Saturday night at an event billed as a "Homecoming Weekend" party at
a downtown club. Howard University was celebrating its homecoming, though a
university spokeswoman said the party was not sponsored by or affiliated with
the school.
Brown remains on probation for assaulting
his on-again, off-again girlfriend Rihanna in 2009 just before the Grammy
Awards. The photos of Rihanna's bruised face caused outrage among many fans.
Brown pleaded guilty to one count of felony assault and received five years'
probation.
His probation was briefly revoked
earlier this year after a traffic accident. A hit-and-run charge was dropped
against him, but the judge gave him 1,000 more hours of community service when
he reinstated his probation.
Brown, who lives in Los Angeles and
is originally from Virginia, has been involved in other altercations since
2009. Police have said a 2012 brawl at a New York nightclub began when members
of rapper Drake's entourage confronted Brown on the dance floor. Neither was
charged in the fight that turned into a bottle-throwing free-for-all.
Brown also tussled with singer Frank
Ocean and others during an argument about a parking space outside a recording
studio in Los Angeles, according to witness accounts given to deputies at the
time. Ocean said he suffered an injured finger, but no charges were filed.
Brown's arrest could affect his
probation in the Rihanna assault case. Brown is due back in court Nov. 20 in
Los Angeles to update a judge on his probation. Prosecutors could seek a
revocation of his probation or ask a judge to impose additional penalties.
Steve Cron, a Los Angeles criminal
defense attorney, said prosecutors and a judge may wait to see how the
Washington case plays out before taking any action against Brown.
"Just the fact that some guy
says 'he hit me' doesn't mean he's in violation" of his probation, Cron
said.
The potential penalties would depend
on the exact wording of Brown's sentence, he said.
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