🎥 Camera, Action… Handcuffs: Chase Chrisley Arrested in Shocking Bar Incident! [See Mugshot]
🎥 Camera, Action… Handcuffs: Chase Chrisley Arrested in Shocking Bar Incident! [See Mugshot]

Atlanta, GA – The ongoing drama surrounding the Chrisley family took another startling turn this week as Chase Chrisley, star of the popular reality television show Chrisley Knows Best, was arrested in Atlanta following an alleged altercation at a local sports bar. The incident, which reportedly involved the 28-year-old slapping a bar manager, has resulted in a charge of simple battery, further casting a shadow over the already troubled reality TV dynasty.
The Atlanta Police Department confirmed that Chase Chrisley was taken into custody on a Thursday, three days after the reported confrontation at a Twin Peaks establishment in the city. According to the police incident report, officers were called to the scene on a Monday evening following a report of an assault, although Chrisley had left before their arrival.
The alleged victim, identified as the general manager of the bar, told police that the reality star had become “really drunk” and started acting “very disrespectful and belligerent.” The manager claims that after repeatedly asking Chrisley to leave the premises, the situation escalated, culminating in the reality personality allegedly slapping him in the face twice. Audio from the manager’s 911 call has been released, in which a frantic voice can be heard repeatedly saying, “Do not touch me,” and confirming, “He just slapped me in the face.”
The arrest of the Growing Up Chrisley alum comes at a difficult time for the family, whose patriarch and matriarch, Todd and Julie Chrisley, are currently serving time in federal prison for bank fraud and tax evasion. The family’s legal woes have kept them in the headlines, but Chase Chrisley’s recent arrest shifts the spotlight to the next generation and raises questions about the pressures they are facing.
Chrisley was booked into the Fulton County Jail and subsequently released on a $10,000 bond. However, his legal team, led by attorneys Drew Findling, Marissa Goldberg, and Zack Findling, quickly issued a vigorous denial of the charges, asserting that the whole situation has been “entirely blown out of proportion.”
In a statement provided to the press, Chrisley’s representatives claimed, “Chase Chrisley had done the right thing that evening by calling a driver to take him home. He did not assault anyone. Chase was trying to close out his tab and leave.” The defense has indicated they plan to launch an independent investigation into the incident, suggesting that the manager’s account may be inaccurate.
Despite the denial, the police report notes that the bar manager has security camera footage of the incident, which they intend to turn over to the authorities as evidence. If the footage corroborates the manager’s testimony, it could significantly complicate Chrisley’s legal defense.
The visible mugshot, now circulating widely across social media and news outlets, serves as a stark reminder of the gravity of the situation. For a family whose public life has been largely chronicled through carefully curated reality television, the image is a sudden, unscripted moment of vulnerability.
As the legal process unfolds, fans and critics alike are left to wonder what this means for Chase Chrisley’s future and how this new scandal will be addressed, if at all, by the family. The Chrisley family has become synonymous with televised Southern luxury, but the simple battery charge against Chase suggests a new, harsher reality playing out far from the cameras of their popular show. The next scene in the Chrisley saga promises more courtroom drama than reality TV glitz.







