Lifestyle
Ex-NFL Star Eddie Lacy Had .325 BAC During DUI Arrest, Cops Say
Former NFL star Eddie Lacy is fortunate he didn’t hurt himself or anyone else on the night of his DUI arrest last month … ’cause cops claim he was driving around with a blood alcohol content level over FOUR TIMES the legal limit.
The Scottsdale Police Dept. says it all happened back on Sept. 30 … after a woman dialed 911 and told dispatch that someone matching Lacy’s Audi SUV description was driving so erratically, she was worried they were “going to kill somebody.”
According to an SPD police report, obtained by TMZ Sports, cops pulled over Lacy in his Q8 a short time after the call was received … and almost immediately, officers noticed something was off about the ex-Green Bay Packers tailback.
“Eddie’s speech was slow,” one cop wrote in the documents, “slurred and mumbled as soon as I began talking to him.”
Body cam footage shows Lacy did appear to be having trouble formulating smooth and coherent sentences — even after the officer told him he recognized him from his Alabama Crimson Tide playing days.
Lacy, though, was able to say he had just flown in from Green Bay and was on his way to his girlfriend’s home — which he stated repeatedly was just a few yards away.
But, when questioned further during the stop … Lacy told one of the officers at the scene he had drunk on his flight into Arizona — consuming “a single shot” of tequila.
Eventually, cops got Lacy out of his ride — and while they weren’t able to conduct a variety of field sobriety tests due to injuries Lacy said he suffered during his football career — they did get him to blow into a breathalyzer … which they said yielded a result of .325.
When asked if he knew what the legal limit was in Arizona, Lacy said yes … pointing out, “I already had a DUI bad” in the past. However, Lacy then couldn’t say whether or not .08 was the right number.
Cops then slapped the cuffs on the 34-year-old … and told him he was arrested for DUI.
Court records show he’s since been hit with several criminal charges — including one count of extreme DUI BAC greater than or equal to .20. He’s slated to face a judge for a hearing on the matter later next month.
As Lacy noted in the police video — it’s not the first time he’s been arrested for extreme DUI … police documents we obtained show in March 2022, he was accused of driving around Scottsdale with a BAC of .247.
Biggest cheer from #Packers fans today when recognizing alumni had to be running back legend; Eddie Lacy. pic.twitter.com/aJEOWJCw4M
— Kyle Malzhan (@KyleMalzhan) September 15, 2024
@KyleMalzhan
Lacy — who made an alumni appearance at Lambeau Field last month just days before his arrest — logged snaps in the NFL from 2013 through 2017 … piling up 3,614 rushing yards in 60 total games.
Lifestyle
Bill Maher is getting the Mark Twain Prize after all
Satirist Bill Maher is this year’s recipient of the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor. Maher will receive the award at the Kennedy Center on June 28th. The show will stream on Netflix at a later date.
Evan Agostini/Invision/AP
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Evan Agostini/Invision/AP
Bill Maher will be receiving the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor after all.
There’s been some confusion about whether the comedian and longtime host of HBO’s Real Time with Bill Maher would, indeed, be getting the top humor award. After The Atlantic cited anonymous sources saying he was, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt called it “fake news.” But today the Kennedy Center made it official.
“For nearly three decades, the Mark Twain Prize has celebrated some of the greatest minds in comedy,” said Roma Daravi, the Kennedy Center’s vice president of public relations in a statement. “For even longer, Bill has been influencing American discourse – one politically incorrect joke at a time.”
Is President Trump, chair of the Kennedy Center’s board, in on the joke?
Maher once visited Trump at the White House and he tends to be more conservative than many of his comedian peers but after their dinner Trump soured on Maher, calling him a “highly overrated LIGHTWEIGHT” on social media.
Maher’s acerbic wit has targeted both political parties and he’s been particularly hard on Trump recently, criticizing his decisions to wage a war with Iran and his personnel choices.
“Trump said, ‘when oil prices go up, we make a lot of money.’ Um, who’s ‘we?,’” Maher said in a recent monologue.
Past recipients of the Mark Twain Prize include Conan O’Brien, Dave Chappelle, Jon Stewart, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Tina Fey, Eddie Murphy and Carol Burnett.
In a statement released through the Kennedy Center, Maher said, “It is indeed humbling to get anything named for a man who’s been thrown out of as many school libraries as Mark Twain.”
Maher will receive the Mark Twain Prize at the Kennedy Center on June 28. The show will stream on Netflix at a later date.
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Suit asks court to force Trump administration to use ‘The Kennedy Center’ name
Workers react to the media after updating signage outside the Kennedy Center on Dec. 19, 2025, in Washington, D.C.
Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images
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Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images
Rep. Joyce Beatty of Ohio is asking a federal court in Washington, D.C., to force President Trump and the board and staff of the Kennedy Center to revert to calling the arts complex The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.
The motion, which Beatty filed on Wednesday, asks a federal circuit court judge to reverse the Trump administration and the center’s current board and staff’s decision to call the complex “The Trump-Kennedy Center.”
In the filing, Beatty’s attorneys wrote: “Can the Board of the Kennedy Center — in direct contradiction of the governing statutes — rename this sacred memorial to John F. Kennedy after President Donald J. Trump? The answer is, unequivocally, ‘no.’ By renaming the Center — in violation of the law — Defendants have breached the terms of the trust and their most basic fiduciary obligations as trustees. Shortly after President John F. Kennedy’s assassination, Congress designated the Kennedy Center as the ‘sole national memorial to the late’ President in the nation’s capital.”

In a statement emailed to NPR Thursday, Roma Daravi, the vice president of public relations for the Kennedy Center, wrote: “We’re confident the court will uphold the board’s decision on the name change and the desperately needed renovations which will continue as scheduled.” NPR also reached out to the White House for comment, but did not receive a reply.
In December, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt announced that the complex would heretofore be called “The Trump-Kennedy Center.” Although the new moniker was never approved by Congress, the Center’s website and publicity materials were immediately updated to reflect the administration’s chosen name, and the same day as Leavitt’s announcement, Trump’s name went up on the signage of the complex’s exterior, over that of the slain President Kennedy.
Later that month, Rep. Beatty who serves as an ex-officio member of the Kennedy Center’s board of trustees, sued Trump, members of the Kennedy Center board appointed by Trump, and some ex-officio members, arguing that the complex’s name had been legislated by Congress in 1964. Wednesday’s motion is part of that lawsuit.

In a press release sent to NPR on Wednesday, Rep. Beatty said: “Donald Trump’s attempt to rename the Kennedy Center after himself is not just an act of ego. It is an attempt to subvert our Constitution and the rule of law. Congress established the Kennedy Center by law, and only Congress can change its name.”
For many patrons, artists and benefactors of the Kennedy Center, the name change was the last straw in politicizing the performing arts hub. Following the White House announcement of the new name, many prominent artists withdrew planned performances there, including the composer Philip Glass (a Kennedy Center Honors award recipient, who received his prize during the first Trump administration), the famed Broadway composer and lyricist Stephen Schwartz and the 18-time Grammy-winning banjo master Béla Fleck.
The Washington National Opera (WNO), which had been in residence at the Kennedy Center since 1971, also severed its ties in January after ticket sales dropped precipitously. Earlier this month, WNO artistic director Francesca Zambello told NPR, “We did try as best as we could to encourage [the patrons] that we are a bipartisan organization, but people really voted with their feet and with their pocketbooks. And so we realized that there was really no choice for us.”

On Monday, a coalition of eight architecture and cultural groups also sued Trump and the Kennedy Center board in federal court over the complex’s scheduled closing in July for unspecified renovations. Their suit seeks to have the White House and board members comply with existing historic preservation laws, and to secure Congressional approval before moving ahead with the renovation plans.
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