
Singer Chris Brown pleads not guilty in U.K. nightclub assault case
Grammy-winning singer Chris Brown pleaded not guilty Friday to a charge related to the serious beating of a music producer with a bottle in a London nightclub in 2023.
Wearing a blue suit, white shirt and black-rimmed glasses, Brown, 36, was arraigned in London's Southwark Crown Court on one count of attempting to unlawfully and maliciously cause grievous bodily harm with intent.
Brown's friend and fellow musician Omololu Akinlolu, 39, who performs under the name Hoody Baby, pleaded not guilty to the same charge.
Prosecutors previously said Brown and Akinlolu assaulted producer Abe Diaw at a bar in the Tape nightclub in London's swanky Mayfair neighborhood in February 2023. Brown allegedly launched an unprovoked attack on Diaw and hit him several times with a bottle and then punched and kicked him.
The attack was caught on surveillance camera in front of a club full of people, prosecutors said.
Brown was originally charged with a single count of grievous bodily harm after his arrest in May, but prosecutors subsequently brought an indictment adding two counts: assault causing actual bodily harm and having an offensive weapon, a bottle.
When a court clerk asked Brown how he pleaded to the grievous bodily harm count, he replied: "Not guilty, ma'am."
Brown did not enter pleas on the additional counts and was ordered to return to court on July 11 to face those charges after wrapping up the European leg of his world tour. His trial was scheduled for Oct. 26, 2026.
The singer of Go Crazy, Run It and Kiss Kiss was released last month on a 5 million-pound ($9.26 million Cdn) bail, which allowed him to start his Breezy Bowl XX tour earlier this month.
Following his release after almost a week in jail, Brown posted on Instagram: "FROM THE CAGE TO THE STAGE!!! BREEZYBOWL."
Brown, who quickly rose to stardom as a teen in 2005, won his first Grammy for best R&B album in 2011 for F.A.M.E. and then earned his second in the same category for 11:11 (Deluxe) earlier this year.
He is currently touring the U.K., playing this weekend in London with subsequent shows in Ireland, Scotland, France and Portugal. He returns to North America at the end of July to play Miami, before moving across the U.S. with a two-night stop in Toronto along the way.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Vulnerable women sent to jail for fatal beating in case Winnipeg judge calls 'dreadful, yet not uncommon'
Two intellectually vulnerable women who beat a man to death have been handed jail sentences that will allow them to serve their time in Manitoba, avoiding longer federal sentences prosecutors asked for that would have sent them to serve their time outside the province. Cherilyn Dumas, 22, and Calianna Keeper, 21, were initially charged with second-degree murder in the death of Derek Karl Stevenson, 33, whose body was found in a rooming house on Austin Street N. in Winnipeg's Point Douglas area on Nov. 1, 2023, after a drunken fight that turned deadly, court heard Friday. Both women later pleaded guilty to the lesser charge of manslaughter, based on their intoxication at the time of the killing, Manitoba Court of King's Bench Justice Chris Martin said as he read his sentencing decision in a Winnipeg courtroom. Dumas, who court heard played a bigger role in the beating and hit Stevenson with a frying pan, was sentenced to four years and six months — and with enhanced credit for time served factored in, will serve just under two more years. Keeper was sentenced to four years, which means 18 more months in custody. After they're released, Dumas and Keeper will also be on supervised probation for three years. In handing down his sentence, the judge noted both women's lives have been marked by "significant psychological, intellectual, cognitive and addiction challenges," as well as childhood trauma and involvement with the child welfare system. "The circumstances of Mr. Stevenson's death and the personal backgrounds of Ms. Keeper and Ms. Dumas are dreadful, yet not uncommon to the court," Martin said, saying a federal sentence "would be adverse" by removing the women from any supports and family they have in Manitoba. The judge noted while both women have criminal records and were assessed as high risks to reoffend, they also co-operated with police, pleaded guilty and showed remorse — and are both young Indigenous women "affected by numerous personal, psychological and cognitive issues." Court heard Dumas has a full-scale IQ below 70 and has been diagnosed with a number of conditions, including an intellectual disability, while Keeper has an IQ below 50 and has been diagnosed with fetal alcohol spectrum disorder, alongside several other disorders. The women were separately brought into court Friday in shackles, and listened quietly from the prisoner's box as their sentences were handed down, a sheriffs' officer sitting between them. Martin said while none of Stevenson's family attended court to speak on his behalf or submitted a victim impact statement, "the Crown indicated his family was impacted by his death." 'Best friend' An agreed statement of facts said the three are seen on surveillance video going to Dumas's address together on the evening of Oct. 29, 2023. Stevenson and the two women were drinking in Dumas's apartment and a fight broke out, leading Dumas to punch Stevenson and hit him several times with a frying pan, court heard. Keeper told police while she kicked Stevenson three times in the face as he tried to get up, she also at times told Dumas to stop the beating, the agreed statement of facts said. Eventually, Dumas and Keeper passed out on a bed, while Stevenson passed out on the floor beside them, still breathing. But when the women woke up, Stevenson was "cold" and they realized he was dead, the statement of facts said. Dumas put a blanket over him, while Keeper called her support worker from Dumas's cellphone and left the suite when the worker arrived. Dumas, who described Stevenson as her "best friend," told police she didn't remember what started the fight. After Keeper left, Dumas continued drinking in the suite until the body began to smell, then went to her mom's home and told her what happened "because she no longer wanted to be alone with Stevenson's body," the court document said. Dumas's mom came back to her apartment with her daughter after getting more alcohol, the statement said. The women then drank the alcohol and started cleaning up some of the blood. At 2:27 a.m. on Nov. 1, 2023, Dumas's mom's stepdad called 911 to report the body in Dumas's apartment. Dumas's mom then took the phone and said she had seen the body there, and that Dumas told her that she and Keeper had beaten the man to death. Police arrived and arrested Dumas, while Keeper was arrested the following day. Court heard an autopsy determined Stevenson bled to death from lacerations to his head caused by the frying pan. Prosecutors had asked for sentences of nine years for Dumas and seven for Keeper — which would have amounted to another 6½ years and 4½ years, respectively, in federal custody, Martin said. Keeper's lawyers requested a sentence between 32 and 48 months (or 12 to 18 with time served factored in), while Dumas's asked for a 54-month sentence (or just under two years going forward), court heard.


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
Motorcycle operator hospitalized with life-threatening injuries
Motorcycle operator taken to hospital with serious injuries after a collision east of London on Friday. (Gerry Dewan/CTV News London) The operator of a motorcycle was taken to hospital with life-threatening injuries after the bike slammed into the side of a Mercedes sedan around 10:30 am Friday. The collision happened at the intersection of Dundas Street and Shaw Road, just east of London. Police say the initial investigation indicates the sedan was heading north on Shaw Road and making a left turn onto Dundas. 062025 The driver of this Mercedes sedan was uninjured after a motorcycle struck side of the vehicle. (Gerry Dewan/CTV News London) The eastbound motorcycle was hit directly on the driver's side door of the passenger vehicle. The intersection of Dundas and Shaw has traffic signals that were operating, but the initial police investigation had not determined which vehicle had the right of way. Police say the driver of the Mercedes was uninjured. Traffic approaching the intersection was shut down in all directions while police conducted their investigation.


CTV News
3 hours ago
- CTV News
London man charged in sexual assault of 12-year-old girl
A London man is charged with sexual assault after a 12-year-old girl was approached in a grocery store. Police said the girl was in a store on Ernest Avenue around 6:10 p.m. when she was approached by a non-familial acquaintance. According to police, the two had a conversation before leaving the store separately, but the man followed the girl. Not far from the store, in the area of Ernest Avenue and Lacey Crescent, police said the suspect sexually assaulted the girl with the incident being captured on video surveillance. The girl told her family about the experience, police were contacted and the suspect was found nearby. A 30-year-old man has been charged with sexual assault on a person under 16 years of age and sexual interference with person under 16 years of age.