Skip to content
Search

Desiigner Arrested on Domestic-Violence Charge in South Carolina

The “Panda” rapper was detained after allegedly pushing a victim to the floor, causing minor bleeding and scratches

Desiigner Arrested on Domestic-Violence Charge in South Carolina

Desiigner in 2022

Johnny Nunez/WireImage

Desiigner, the rapper best known for his 2015 hit “Panda,” was arrested on domestic-violence charges in South Carolina earlier this week.

According to Horry County jail records, the rapper — real name Sidney Royel Selby III — was booked on Monday, March 23, and released on a $1,500 bond the following day. His charge is listed as third-degree domestic violence.


Details about the alleged incident remain scarce. According to ABC News 4 in Charleston, South Carolina, police responded to a disturbance at a home on March 3, but Selby was not there when the cops arrived. A warrant reportedly stated that Selby tore a pair of car keys from an unidentified victim’s pants and then allegedly threw her on the floor. The victim reportedly sustained minor bleeding and scratches.

Reps for Selby did not immediately return Rolling Stone’s request for comment, nor did the Horry County Police Department.

Selby has had various legal troubles over the years, including a 2023 federal case in which he was charged with indecent exposure and conduct during a flight from Tokyo to Minneapolis. The case was eventually settled, with Selby completing community service, paying a fine, and accepting two years of probation.

Prior to that, in 2016, Selby and several others were detained after an alleged road-rage altercation in New York City. Selby was accused of pointing a weapon at people in another car, but the gun charge was eventually dropped.

Since dropping “Panda,” Desiigner has continually released music, including a new album, ii, which arrived last year. He’s shared two new singles this year, “Relax,” which dropped at the end of February, and “Feel Me Dawg,” which arrived last week.

More Stories

Kelela, the Strokes, Holly Humberstone, and All the Songs You Need to Know This Week

Kelela gets inspired by a novel by Octavia Butler on her new track

Bre Johnson/WWD

Kelela, the Strokes, Holly Humberstone, and All the Songs You Need to Know This Week

Welcome to our weekly rundown of the best new music — featuring big singles, key tracks from our favorite albums, and more. This week, Kelela ponders the end of the world on a shoegazing track inspired by Parable of the Sower; The Strokes return with a bubbly (and Auto-Tuned) ditty from their recently announced seventh album, and Holly Humberstone rails against the double standards set for young women in music on her new record’s knockout finale. Plus, new duets from Doechii and Lady Gaga, Kehlani and Missy Elliott, and Anitta and Shakira.

Kelela, “Idea 1” (YouTube)

Keep ReadingShow less
Prosecutors Put Rap Lyrics on Trial. Maryland Is About to Shut It Down

Tupac Shakur at the Club USA in New York City, New York, 1994.

Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images

Prosecutors Put Rap Lyrics on Trial. Maryland Is About to Shut It Down

“I’m Gucci. It’s a rap. F**k [can they do] about a rap?”

Those are the words of Lawrence Montague on a jail phone call, words that now sit at the center of a broader legal reckoning unfolding in Maryland over the use of rap lyrics as evidence in criminal proceedings.

Keep ReadingShow less
Apollonia ‘Very Pleased’ After Trademark War Settlement With Prince Estate

Prince and Apollonia Kotero in the film 'Purple Rain', 1984.

Warner Brothers/Getty Images

Apollonia ‘Very Pleased’ After Trademark War Settlement With Prince Estate

Apollonia has reached a confidential settlement with Prince’s estate, ending her lawsuit that sought a court ruling affirming her right to use the name Prince gave her when she played his love interest in the iconic 1984 film Purple Rain.

The parties filed a joint notice of dismissal Wednesday but kept the confidential deal under wraps, saying only that each side will cover its own legal fees and costs. But in a sign Apollonia will keep using the name, the estate simultaneously told the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office it was dropping its bid to cancel her “Apollonia 6” trademark, filings show.

Keep ReadingShow less
Violet Grohl ‘Really’ Doesn’t Care About Being a Nepo Baby: Call Me One ‘All You Want’

Violet Grohl

Getty Images for The Recording Arts

Violet Grohl ‘Really’ Doesn’t Care About Being a Nepo Baby: Call Me One ‘All You Want’

Violet Grohl knows the world considers her a nepo baby, thanks to her dad Dave Grohl of Foo Fighters and Nirvana fame, but she doesn’t let the label hurt her feelings.

“Obviously, doors are open for me because of my last name,” the 19-year-old rising singer-songwriter told The Forty-Five in a new interview. “It’s not something I’m ever going to hide behind or say, ‘No, I worked so hard for this! You guys shouldn’t say that! That hurts my feelings.’”

Keep ReadingShow less
Foo Fighters Reflect on Mortality on Thrashing Single ‘Of All People’

Foo Fighters

Elizabeth Miranda

Foo Fighters Reflect on Mortality on Thrashing Single ‘Of All People’

Foo Fighters have shared a new single, “Of All People.” The raucous track is the fourth track to emerge from the rock band’s forthcoming 12th LP, Your Favorite Toy, out April 24.

The song sees frontman Dave Grohl reflecting on life’s unfairness. “Of all people, you survived/ When no one else could stay alive,” he sings on the aggressive rock tune. “You know you should be dead/ But you’re alive instead.”

Keep ReadingShow less