The Louisiana State University Police Department has arrested Lane Hardy, winner of the 17th season of American Idol, after she accused the singer of wiretapping his ex-girlfriend’s bedroom with a tape recorder.
Hardy, 21, was booked into East Baton Rouge Parish Jail for violating 15:1303 – intercepting and exposing wired, electronic or verbal communications. If convicted, he could face a fine of up to $10,000 or a prison sentence of two to 10 years.
According to the arrest warrant, a woman and her roommate found a recording device inside their room on April 6. The next day, they reported the results to LSU police. The note told police she found the device, which looked like a phone charger, under her photon.
She told the officers that she believed her ex-boyfriend, Hardy, had left the device in her room earlier because he seemed to know details about what was going on in her life even though she hadn’t told him about them. Police said they later found evidence of secret recordings made over 10 days in February, according to the memo.
The police said in an affidavit that “the victim immediately advised her to confront him, and he confessed to her that he had left a ‘bug’ in her room but that he had thrown it into his pond.”
Hardy is a Louisiana native and lives in Livingston Parish. He is not an LSU student.
The “Idol” star confirmed the existence of an arrest warrant for him In a post on Facebook Thursday, avoiding details but citing an incident of a “sensitive nature” that occurred on the LSU campus.
“Earlier today, I received a warrant for the allegations made against me and was cooperating fully with the Louisiana State University Police Department,” Hardy wrote. “I understand that my career has pushed me into the public spotlight, and I wholeheartedly embrace that because my entire world belongs to my music and my fans.”
“However, given the sensitive nature of this allegation, I humbly request privacy at this time,” he continued.
“I am very respectful of the law and will assist in their investigation as needed moving forward,” he said.
‘American Idol’:Gabby Barrett returns to mentor, Adam Lambert makes the singer cry on stage
In a statement to USA TODAY, Hardy’s attorney, C. Frank Holthus, said, “Mr. Hardy received a warrant earlier today and has been, and will continue to be, fully cooperating with the Louisiana State University Police Department on this matter.”
University representative Ernie Ballard also confirmed the “active investigation” to USA TODAY.
Hardy rose to fame after winning “American Idol” in 2019. It marked the end of a long road in the singing competition for the singer, Livingston, Louisiana, who previously participated in the show in 2018 but was eliminated from the top 50.
He hadn’t intended to make another attempt for “Idol” in 2019, but was persuaded to sing to the judges again when he accompanied his girlfriend Ashton Gill on guitar to her audition. While Jill didn’t make it to Hollywood, Hardy took his golden ticket all the way to victory, winning fans young and old with his throwback song choices and Elvis Presley-like egos.
‘American Idol’ season 19:Lynne Hardy on his win, the Elvis effect and the ‘Vampire Diaries’ obsession
“I hesitated to take the golden ticket (to Hollywood), and then knew I’d give it another try and see how far I can get,” Hardy told USA TODAY after his win. “All season long I had other thoughts about it because it was really hard, but I kept doing what I was doing; I work myself every day and keep on doing it.”
Contributing: Patrick Ryan, USA TODAY; Associated Press
“Freelance entrepreneur. Communicator. Gamer. Explorer. Pop culture practitioner.”
More Stories
The Gen Z pop star launched Harris’ campaign. Puerto Rican musicians might just get it over the finish line
Menendez resents suspicion as prosecutor seeks clemency from Newsom
Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo look forward to the Oscars