Current:Home > ContactCharlie Sheen assaulted in Malibu home by woman with a weapon, deputies say -FutureFinance
Charlie Sheen assaulted in Malibu home by woman with a weapon, deputies say
View
Date:2025-04-19 07:19:09
A woman has been arrested for allegedly assaulting Charlie Sheen, 58, in a Malibu home this week.
Deputies responded to a battery/disturbance call at around 1 p.m. Wednesday. The suspect, Electra Schrock, was arrested for assault with a deadly weapon and residential burglary, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department said in a statement Friday to USA TODAY. Her court hearing was scheduled for Friday morning.
"Upon contacting the parties involved, deputies identified Charlie Sheen as a victim of assault," to the sheriff's department's statement reads. According to the Los Angeles Times and NBC News, the incident took place at Sheen's residence; a sheriff's department spokesperson declined to comment on the matter.
USA TODAY has reached out to Sheen's representatives for comment.
TMZ was first to report the news.
Schrock, 47, faces felony charges, according to sheriff's department booking records. If convicted for assault with a deadly weapon using force likely to create bodily injury, she faces up to four years in state prison or a year in county jail as well as a fine of up to $10,000. First-degree burglary carries a sentence of up to six years in state prison.
Sheen has largely stayed out of the limelight in recent years and previously claimed to have been "blacklisted" from the entertainment industry. The "Two and a Half Men" star has publicly struggled with drug and alcohol abuse and has been arrested for several domestic incidents, including assaulting his second wife, Brooke Mueller, in 2009, as well as former girlfriend Brittany Ashland in 1996.
In a 2019 appearance on the British morning talk show "Loose Women," Sheen revealed he had been sober for a year. "Some of it is very surreal," he said of his past incidents. "To this day, I'm not sure how I created such chaos and wound up in that head space."
The actor currently appears in the new Max series, "Bookie," in which he plays a gambling-addicted version of himself. This marks a reunion between Sheen and the show's co-creator, Chuck Lorre — who hadn't talked for “at least a decade,” Lorre recently told USA TODAY — after Sheen was fired from Lorre's "Men" in 2011.
'Bookie':How Charlie Sheen leveraged a sports-gambling habit to reunite with Chuck Lorre
veryGood! (3931)
Related
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- 'Nuclear bomb of privacy' or easy entry? MLB's face recognition gates delight and daunt
- 13 inmates, guards and others sentenced for drug trafficking at Louisiana’s maximum-security prison
- Recipient of world's first pig kidney transplant discharged from Boston hospital
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Houthis may be running low on their weapons stocks as attacks on ships slow, US commander says
- WWE WrestleMania 40 details: Time, how to watch, match card and more
- Maritime terminal prepares for influx of redirected ships as the Baltimore bridge cleanup continues
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Worker burned in explosion at Wisconsin stadium settles lawsuit for $22 million, attorney says
Ranking
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Planters is looking to hire drivers to cruise in its Nutmobile: What to know about the job
- Disney shareholders back CEO Iger, rebuff activist shareholders who wanted to shake up the company
- The teaching of Hmong and Asian American histories to be required in Wisconsin under a new law
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- New York adulterers could get tossed out of house but not thrown in jail under newly passed bill
- 'Coordinated Lunar Time': NASA asked to give the moon its own time zone
- Governor says budgetary cap would limit his immediate response to natural disasters in Kentucky
Recommendation
South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
What do jellyfish eat? Understanding the gelatinous sea creature's habits.
NASA probes whether object that crashed into Florida home came from space station
Tom Felton Reveals Which Scene He Wishes Made It Into Harry Potter
The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
Why Heather Rae El Moussa Says Filming Selling Sunset Was “Very Toxic”
Powell hints Fed still on course to cut rates three times in 2024 despite inflation uptick
Oklahoma prepares to execute Michael DeWayne Smith for 2002 murders