Phil Rudd, AC/DC drummer, charged with breach of house arrest - Action News
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Phil Rudd, AC/DC drummer, charged with breach of house arrest

Phil Rudd, Australian-born former drummer of rock band AC/DC, was released on bail after he was charged in a New Zealand court on Monday for consuming alcohol in breach of the conditions of his home detention.

Rudd, 61, had pleaded guilty to charges of threatening to kill and possession of drugs

Phil Rudd arrives for sentencing at the New Zealand District Court in Tauranga on July 9, on charges of threatening to kill a man and drug possession. (Marty Melville/AFP/Getty Images)

AC/DC drummer Phil Rudd was released on bail on Monday after his weekend arrest in New Zealand on a charge of breaching the conditions of his home detention sentence for threatening to kill a former employee.

The 61-year-old Australian-born drummer was arrested at his home on New Zealand's North Island on Saturday night, though police have refused to comment on the nature of the arrest.

Rudd's lawyer, Craig Tuck, told The Associated Press that his client appeared in the Tauranga District Court on Monday on a charge of breaching conditions of his home detention by allegedly possessing and consuming alcohol.

Rudd was released on bail and will enter a plea when he appears in court on Aug. 3, Tuck said.

The musician was sentenced to eight months of home confinement on July 9 after pleading guilty to threatening to kill a man who used to work for him and possession of methamphetamine and marijuana.

In that case, Rudd acknowledged in a court summary of facts that he'd offered cash, vehicles and a house to an associate after asking him to have the victim "taken out." He also acknowledged that he'd directly said to the victim he was going to kill him. Prosecutors had originally charged Rudd with murder-for-hire, but later dropped that charge, citing lack of evidence.

At the sentencing hearing, Judge Thomas Ingram warned Rudd that he would go to prison if he breached the terms of his home detention, which banned him from taking any nonprescription drugs and subjected him to monitoring.

"I stone-cold guarantee that's where you'll end up," Ingram told the drummer at the hearing. "I'm not your headmaster, I'm not your father I'm a judge."

On Monday, prosecutor Anna Pollett requested that as a condition of bail, Rudd be required to undergo drug and alcohol testing whenever police request it, the New Zealand Herald reported. Tuck did not oppose the request, and it was granted.

Rudd, wearing a leather jacket bearing the AC/DC insignia, did not comment on his latest legal drama as he left the courthouse. Instead, he raised his hands and extended his middle fingers at a crowd of waiting journalists before getting into a car and driving away.

According to a court summary of facts, the dispute between Rudd and his victim began in August when Rudd threw a party at his restaurant to celebrate the launch of his solo album, "Head Job." Rudd felt the launch hadn't gone well and subsequently fired several employees, including the victim, whose name has been suppressed by the court.

Rudd later called an associate and told him he wanted the victim "taken out," according to the court summary. In another call, Rudd offered the associate "$200,000, a motorbike, one of his cars or a house," which the associate took to mean as payment for carrying out his earlier request. Two hundred thousand New Zealand dollars is equivalent to about US$130,000. The morning after calling his associate, Rudd called the victim directly, saying "I'm going to come over and kill you," according to the court summary.

Police found marijuana and methamphetamine in several parts of Rudd's home during a search of the house, the court summary said. They also found methamphetamine in his pocket.

It's unclear whether Rudd has a future with the Australian rock band he's been part of on-and-off for four decades.