Police Search Justin Bieber's House After Egging Incident, Felony Search Warrant Finds Cocaine
Justin Bieber is finding himself in more and more hot water since the egging incident heard 'round the world: the police have executed a search warrant on his house and, after a thorough search, have discovered cocaine in the singer's possession.
According to The New York Daily News, when the substance was found in the Los Angeles home of the pop star, he claimed that it "belonged to one of his friends," because no pop star in the history of the universe has ever used cocaine.
Needless to say, Bieber threw aspiring rapper Little Za -- real name: Xavier Smith -- under the bus when he claimed that the cocaine belonged to him. Smith was then arrested on charges of felony drug possession, and is currently free on $70,000 in bail. While Smith was in lockup, he damaged a phone, and this earned him a felony vandalism charge while he was still waiting to be arraigned for the drug possession charge. (With friends like Justin Bieber, who needs enemies?)
"'Bieber didn't answer questions or give a statement about his alleged felony vandalism as detectives searched his residence in upscale Calabasas and recovered evidence after viewing some surveillance video,' the cop said. The irate neighbor, Jeffrey Schwartz, claims he saw the Biebs from his second-floor balcony. Schwartz quickly called police and said the star threw at least 20 eggs at his home, causing about $20,000 in damage to his plaster and wood exterior," writes The Daily News.
And, according to CNN, this is just the latest in a string of complaints that The Beebs' neighbors have about him. In May, two neighbors called the police when he was seen speeding down the residential streets. In response, retired NFL star Keyshawn Johnson went to Bieber's home to counsel him about the dangers of going too fast on the residential streets, but Bieber wouldn't speak to him. Finally, in March, a neighbor accused Bieber of spitting on him during a heated argument about God-knows-what. No charges were filed in that incident, however.