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Phil Rudd, AC/DC drummer, sentenced to home detention for threat to kill | Phil Rudd, AC/DC drummer, sentenced to home detention for threat to kill |
(about 3 hours later) | |
AC/DC drummer Phil Rudd has been sentenced in New Zealand to eight months of home detention after pleading guilty to threatening to kill a man who used to work for him, along with possession of methamphetamine and marijuana. | AC/DC drummer Phil Rudd has been sentenced in New Zealand to eight months of home detention after pleading guilty to threatening to kill a man who used to work for him, along with possession of methamphetamine and marijuana. |
The 61-year-old drummer was sentenced in Tauranga district court on New Zealand’s North Island on Thursday. He had faced up to seven years in prison on the threatening to kill charge. | The 61-year-old drummer was sentenced in Tauranga district court on New Zealand’s North Island on Thursday. He had faced up to seven years in prison on the threatening to kill charge. |
Rudd pleaded guilty to the charges in April, acknowledging in a court summary of facts that he had offered large amounts of cash, vehicles and a house to an associate after asking him to have the victim “taken out”. | Rudd pleaded guilty to the charges in April, acknowledging in a court summary of facts that he had offered large amounts of cash, vehicles and a house to an associate after asking him to have the victim “taken out”. |
He also acknowledged that he had directly said to the victim he was going to kill him. | He also acknowledged that he had directly said to the victim he was going to kill him. |
Judge Thomas Ingram told Rudd, 61, he needed to rehabilitate himself from drugs if he wanted to return to rock band AC/DC. | |
Rudd will be electronically monitored at his Tauranga waterside mansion and must also complete a rehabilitation program. | |
Ingram told Rudd there “was nowhere to hide” and he would be jailed if he was found with any traces of drugs or alcohol in his system. | |
Until Rudd rehabilitated himself from a longstanding meth addiction, a future with the band was unlikely, the judge said. | |
“You are a man that clearly has rehabilitative needs,” he said. | |
Rudd’s lawyer, Craig Tuck, argued for a discharge without conviction, saying a conviction would leave Rudd unable to travel to Japan, Canada and the US with the band, resulting in the loss of tens of millions of dollars. | |
Tuck said Rudd’s actions were the result of methamphetamine psychosis. | |
But Judge Ingram said Rudd had been discharged twice before, on assault and cannabis charges, and there was no evidence to suggest he was with the band any more. | |
The judge was not convinced Rudd’s drumming was integral to the AC/DC sound. “Queen replaced Freddie Mercury,” Judge Ingram said. |
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