Charlie Sheen faces Monday court date in threat case
Will Charlie Sheen cut a deal with prosecutors, or is he ready to fight to clear his name? Thatâs the question as the sitcom starâs court date looms Monday.
FOR THE RECORD:
Charlie Sheen: An article in Saturdayâs Calendar about Charlie Sheenâs court appearance in Aspen, Colo., on domestic violence charges said that the actor returned to work âearlier this week.â In fact, Sheenâs show âTwo and a Half Menâ was on a production break last week. The show resumed production with Sheen Tuesday. â
Facing a felony charge from a Christmas Day incident in Aspen, Colo., when his wife called 911 to say the actor was threatening her life, Sheen is facing the endgame of a scandal that has threatened to engulf his career.
According to TMZ, the celebrity website that has followed the case on a near-daily basis, Sheen is preparing to plead no contest to a misdemeanor in exchange for prosectuors dropping the felony menacing charge and would also submit to anger management classes. But prosecutors arenât necessarily eager to cut a deal, according to the website, which relied on unnamed sources.
RadarOnline, TMZâs gossip archrival, takes a different tack, asserting that Sheen will try to beat the rap by attacking the credibility of one of the arresting officers, who has since been sacked from the police force for alleged violations of departmental policies unconnected to the Sheen incident.
Sheenâs spokesman Stan Rosenfield would not comment directly on the case but said without elaboration that the online reports contained âboth accurate and inaccurateâ information. The only purpose of Mondayâs court date, he added, is for his client to enter a formal plea.
âCharlie will be in court on the 15th and back at work on the 16th,â Rosenfield said.
Meanwhile, production on âTwo and a Half Men,â his No. 1-rated CBS sitcom, has been thrown up in the air. The show was forced to shut down suddenly last month when Sheen went into rehab as a âpreventative measure.â He finally returned to work earlier this week to start shooting one of this seasonâs last few remaining episodes. Rosenfield sought to minimize the notion of a disruption.
âSince all days he was not able to go to work because he was in rehab will be made up, he has not missed any work days,â he said. CBS would not comment on the case.
As damaging as Sheenâs problems may be in the short term, many experts do not expect them to have much effect on the rest of his career, especially given his personal history, which has included previous drug use and a notorious appearance in the âblack bookâ of Hollywood madam Heidi Fleiss.
âSheenâs career can recover yet again,â said Jeffrey McCall, professor of communication at DePauw University in Indiana. âItâs not like heâs been a model citizen in the past, so this latest problem should not shock anybody.
âAmerican audiences are very forgiving and seem to be OK with flawed celebrities.â