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Rapper T.I. arrested outside of his gated community in Henry County

See his response, below

HENRY COUNTY, Ga. — Atlanta entertainer T.I. has been arrested in Henry County.

The artist, whose real name is Clifford Harris, was arrested Wednesday morning outside of his gated community.

According to police, the guard at Eagles' Landing Country Club called police on T.I. and a friend after the rapper began yelling at the guard, who refused to let him in the gate.

In the police report filed by Henry County Police officers, T.I told police when he pulled up to the guard shack, the guard was sleeping. After waking him, the rapper told police he asked to be let inside the neighborhood.

NEW VIDEO SHOWS T.I. IN JAIL --> https://youtu.be/pCxvn6NgEAg

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After initially refusing, the guard relented. T.I. asked the guard what his name was several times, but the guard didn't answer. After a while, T.I. and his friend drove off. The report then states that the rapper walked more than half a mile back to the guard shack.

The guard's version of events paints a different story, however. According to the report, the guard asked T.I. who he was and where he was going. At that time, the guard said T.I. told him, "Harris, hook me up."

The guard told police he did not recognize T.I., and did not let him in the gate. That's when the guard said T.I. started using profanity and yelled at him to open the gate and let him inside the neighborhood. The guard eventually let the rapper in, but he told police T.I. came back the shack and began making threats like "come outside so we can deal with it." The guard told police he felt threatened because T.I. told him he would come back, and he did, so he called police.

When officers questioned T.I. further about why he wanted the guard to come out of the shack, he said it was so he could explain "who he was." At that point, officers asked the rapper if he had had anything to drink because he could "smell alcohol coming from his breath." The officer also noted his eyes were "bloodshot and glassy" and he was "acting aggravated" while speaking.

T.I. was arrested and charged with simple assault, disorderly conduct and public drunkenness. The friend, who had a warrant out for his arrest from Clayton County, was arrested on that warrant.

T.I. was booked into the Henry County jail but posted a $2,250 bail shortly after.

T.I.'s wife, R&B singer and songwriter Tameka "Tiny" Harris owns a home in the Eagles's Landing Country Club community that she bought in 2014.

His attorney, Steve Sadow, released a statement saying the rapper was wrongfully arrested.

"Tip was wrongfully arrested early this morning when he attempted to gain entrance into his gated community - where his wife “Tiny” and his family reside. The guard was sound asleep when Tip arrived at the guardhouse. It took Tip some time to wake up the sleeping guard. Tip clearly identified himself and sought entry. The guard refused entry. Tip was in contact with “Tiny” by phone and “Tiny” confirmed that Tip should be let in immediately. The guard continued to refuse entry without justification. Words were exchanged and apparently the guard and/or a supervisor called the police. When the police arrived, they were not interested in hearing Tip’s side of the story and wrongfully chose to end the situation by arresting Tip."

Aside from being a rapper and actor, T.I. is also a activist involved in local and national social issues. Last year he used his star power to fuel a boycott of Houston's restaurant after allegations of racial discrimination surfaced.

Earlier this year, he sat down with 11Alive's Neima Abdulahi to discuss school walkouts and gun violence after the Parkland high school shooting in Florida.

At the time he said seeing young people involved gives him hope.

"To see young people involved with something so important right now – that gives a sense of hope," T.I. said. "The kids – they are going to be the future leaders. So, whatever they're concerned about right now, those are the things that stand the most opportunity for change. Those are the things that 10 years from now, when they are not high school students; they are young lawyers, and they are lobbying and protesting and so on, and so forth – I think that is what we need. I think that is what the future of America is longing for: Young people who actually care about things that matter."

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