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Rush Guitarist Busted for Brawl
01/05/2004 1:15 PM, E! Online Josh Grossberg
Exit stage leftand go to jail.
That's the way Rush
guitarist savant Alex Lifeson rang in the New Year, spending the
midnight hour in the slammer after getting busted for for allegedly
assaulting a police officer and resisting arrest at a New Year's Eve
bash Wednesday night in Naples, Florida.
Lifeson, who was
booked under his given name, Alex Zivojinovich, faces six charges,
including aggravated battery on a law enforcement officer, resisting
arrest and drunken violent behavior following a scuffle that broke out
shortly before midnight at a posh party at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel,
according to the Naples Daily News.
The confrontation
got started when the fret-man's 33-year-old son, Justin Zivojinovich,
joined the house band on stage to sing his wife a song. But local
sheriff's deputies told the younger Zivojinovich to get off after
someone called hotel security.
When Justin refused to stand
down, authorities tried to forcibly remove him. That's when Daddy
purportedly lost his cool and came out swinging.
Police
reports filed by the Collier County Sheriff's Office indicate that
during the ensuing melee, Lifeson spat blood on a deputy's face and
pushed a female deputy down a hotel stairwell. He was so rowdy and
violent, one report contends, that officers said they were forced to use
a stun gun to subdue him.
Justin Zivojinovich was also
arrested, as was his 30-year-old wife, Michelle. The couple were
released on New Year's Day.
Because four of the six counts
against him are felonies, including striking an officer--charges that
carry a maximum sentence of up to 30 years in jail--the 50-year-old
virtuoso wasn't released from lockup until Friday after posting $15,000
bail.
Lifeson exited the lockup in same black suit he was
wearing for the party--he also sported a pair of black, a swollen nose
and blood stains on his white shirt.
"This gives new meaning
to dinner at the Ritz," the guitarist told the Naples Daily News.
"They didn't like the way we were dancing, apparently."
The
musician's son also disputed the police version of events, blaming the
fracas on an overly zealous security detail.
"I was singing
'Happy New Year's,' that's all I was doing, singing to the whole crowd.
That's all I said, 'Happy New Year,'" Justin Zivojinovich told the
newspaper. "Everyone was enjoying themselves. That's when someone
apparently started yelling for one of the security guards. There was no
violence on our part."
He claimed it was deputies who
instigated the fight that resulted in his father's broken nose, not the
other way around.
Lifeson's attorney, Jerry Berry, was not
immediately available for comment; neither was a publicist for the
band.
The guitarist, who makes up the prog-rock trio with
fellow Canadians Neil Peart and Geddy Lee , maintains a part-time
residence in Naples.
For Rush fans, such bad boy behavior
seems out of character coming from a guy best known for his riffs on
such classic rock radio staples as "The Spirit of Radio," "Tom Sawyer,"
"Limelight" and "Freewill." The band, which has notched 23 gold and
platinum in a four-decade career, released its latest album, the
triple-disc concert collection Rush in Rio, in October.
Lifeson is scheduled for arraignment on January 26.
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