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Posted: 2020-06-04T21:06:09Z | Updated: 2020-06-05T06:43:25Z YouTuber Jake Paul Charged With Trespassing In Looted Arizona Mall | HuffPost

YouTuber Jake Paul Charged With Trespassing In Looted Arizona Mall

The YouTube star was charged with two misdemeanors after video showed him inside a closed mall in Scottsdale while it was being looted.
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YouTube star Jake Paul was charged with two misdemeanors on Thursday after being filmed at a mall that was being looted Saturday in Scottsdale, Arizona.

Paul has been charged with criminal trespass and unlawful assembly, both misdemeanors. He was not booked into jail, but has a court date next month, according to KYTX .

Scottsdale police said they charged Paul after receiving hundreds of tips alleging that the controversial 23-year-old YouTuber was participating in looting at the mall after it was closed, according to KTAR .

A Scottsdale Police Department statement said Paul “was present after the protest was declared an unlawful assembly” and “unlawfully entered and remained inside of the mall when it was closed.”

Paul did not deny being at the mall but rejected looting accusations. In a post shared on Twitter and Instagram, he said he had spent the day peacefully protesting the police killing of George Floyd and was at the mall “strictly documenting, not engaging.”

Video footage of Paul and his friends is unclear about what exactly Paul was doing at the mall. Some followers have claimed, according to the Independent , that they saw Paul holding a bottle of vodka from a nearby shop.

Paul didn’t seem too concerned about the charges, tweeting, “gimme my charges and let’s put the focus back on George Floyd and Black Lives Matter.”

Paul’s older brother and fellow social media influencer Logan Paul publicly scolded his brother for being at the mall as it was being looted.

“To be honest, this one is so fucking hard for me because I love the kid,” he said on a YouTube video posted Wednesday. “Why he was inside of a mall that was being looted, I have no idea. I talked to him on the phone, he was at a dinner that was next to the mall. It was very unfortunate but very on-brand for Jake Paul to magically be seen at a looting site.”

However, he also insisted that anyone who said Jake was participating in the looting is “a fucking moron.”

The Paul brothers have become popular social media stars thanks to videos that show them engaging in a variety of stunts that can alternately be described as outrageous and abhorrent.

Jake Paul first came to fame on the Disney Channel show “Bizaardvark,” but was fired in 2017 after neighbors near his Los Angeles area home claimed that his penchant of doing dangerous stunts for internet clicks had turned the neighborhood into a “war zone.”

Older brother Logan came under fire in 2018 after posting a disturbing video in Japan of what appeared to be a man who had killed himself.

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Before You Go

32 Powerful Signs From Anti-Racism Protests Around The World
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A protester at an anti-racism demonstration in London on June 3 holds a sign that reads: "Our skin is not a weapon." (credit:DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS via Getty Images)
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A demonstrator in Brooklyn, New York, calls for justice for George Floyd and other victims of police violence with a sign that reads: "I understand that I will never understand. However, I stand. #peaceandjustice" (credit:Michael Nigro/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images)
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Breezy Rose of Kansas posted this photo of her husband holding a sign that says "Stop killing us" and her daughter holding a sign that says "Please don't shoot my dad" on Instagram. In the caption, Breezy wrote: "When I tell you I cried after snapping this picture at a rally for George Floyd today, I sobbed. This is our reality. This is reality for every black person in our country. Today I wept for George Floyd, for Breonna Taylor, for Ahmaud Arbery, for Eric Garner, for Sandra Bland, for Tamir Rice and for so many others. Today I wept for my husband having to teach this to our daughter. And today I wept for our daughter, who has to grow up with this fear. Today, we wept. But tomorrow, we fight." (credit:breezyrosef/Instagram )
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Demonstrators march near Lafayette Park across from the White House on June 2 in Washington, D.C. The sign on the left says, "I'd like to speak to the manager of systemic racism, please." The other reads: "Black Lives Matter." (credit:OLIVIER DOULIERY via Getty Images)
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Demonstrators protest police brutality at Bayfront Park in downtown Miami on May 30. The sign reads: "No lives matter til Black lives matter. #saytheirnames"
(credit:ADAM DELGIUDICE via Getty Images)
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Courtney, a nurse, attends a sit-in protest in Saint Paul, Minnesota, on June 2. (She was wearing a mask but removed it for the photo, she said). The sign reads: "What color am I when I save your life? Signed, a Black R.N." (credit:_courtneypaigee_/Instagram)
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Atlanta protester Maya Nicole is working with the organization Millennial Civil Rights on a campaign called #WeSaveUs . Her sign says: "We deserve more than justice. We deserve a better reality." (credit:@mayanicole_/Instagram )
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New York City demonstrators walk from Foley Square past 1 Police Plaza on their way to Washington Square Park for a peaceful moment of reflection for those killed by police. The sign on the left reads: "We pay you to protect us, not kill us." (credit:Ira L. Black - Corbis via Getty Images)
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A woman holds up a sign with the Martin Luther King Jr. quote "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere" during a protest in Manhattan Beach, California, on June 2. (credit:Jay L. Clendenin via Getty Images)
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A man holds up a sign that says "Am I next?" at a Manhattan Beach, California, protest on June 2. (credit:Jay L. Clendenin via Getty Images)
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An NYPD officer walks by a banner reading "Say Their Names" on June 1 in Brooklyn, New York. (credit:Erik McGregor via Getty Images)
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During a June 1 protest near the White House over the death of George Floyd, a demonstrator holds a sign that says: "It could have been my son." (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
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Protester holds a sign that says "Indifference is evil" during an anti-racism demonstration in London on June 3. (credit:BEN STANSALL via Getty Images)
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Protesters gather outside the residence of Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz on June 1. One man's sign reads: "Video taker: A national hero." (credit:CHANDAN KHANNA via Getty Images)
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On June 1, a protester in Brooklyn, New York, holds a sign that reads: "4 my future Black kids." (credit:Erik McGregor via Getty Images)
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A close-up of a sign that says: "The colour of my skin should not place a target on my back" during a May 31 protest outside Cardiff Castle in Wales. (credit:Matthew Horwood via Getty Images)
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A woman holds a drawing of George Floyd with "I can't breathe" written underneath as thousands of people join a Black Lives Matter march through central London on May 31. (credit:Guy Smallman via Getty Images)
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Protesters hold posters and shout slogans as they march in central London on June 3. The sign in the foreground says: "You have no authority to kill a minority." (credit:TOLGA AKMEN via Getty Images)
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A seated protester holds a sign during a June 2 demonstration in Los Angeles over the death of George Floyd. (credit:KYLE GRILLOT via Getty Images)
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A protester holds up a piece of yellow plastic that reads, "Don't shoot" while participating in a demonstration outside the Forest Hills MBTA Station in Boston on June 2. (credit:Boston Globe via Getty Images)
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In Boyertown, Pennsylvania, a protester holds a sign that says "Charge the other 3," referring to the other three police officers present when their colleague kneeled on George Floyd's neck and killed him. The former officers have since been charged with aiding and abetting. (credit:MediaNews Group/Reading Eagle via Getty Images via Getty Images)
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Demonstrators protesting the death of George Floyd hold up placards near Lafayette Park across from the White House on June 2 in Washington, D.C. The sign in the center reads: "Who do u protect?" (credit:OLIVIER DOULIERY via Getty Images)
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A protester kneels as he holds a placard that says "Stop killer cops!!!!" in front of a row of Army National Guard troops during a June 2 demonstration in Hollywood, California. (credit:AGUSTIN PAULLIER via Getty Images)
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A protester holds a sign that says "Blue Lives Murder" on May 29 in Minneapolis. (credit:Jason Armond via Getty Images)
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In Sydney, protesters prepare to march on Parliament House at the Archibald Fountain in Hyde Park on June 2. The one in the foreground reads: "We're not trying to start a race war. We're trying to end one." (credit:Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
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Protest signs posted outside the U.S. Consulate General in Edinburgh, Scotland, in response to the police killing of George Floyd. One reads: "Stop looting Black lives. End police brutality." (credit:Jane Barlow - PA Images via Getty Images)
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New York protesters take part in a June 1 demonstration in response to the death of George Floyd. The sign on the left reads: "In unity we have strength;" the one on the right reads: "We have suffered enough." (credit:SOPA Images via Getty Images)
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People shout slogans during a June 1 protest at Dam Square in Amsterdam over the death of George Floyd. The banner reads: "Police violence is not an accident." (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
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People carry a banner that says "We the people refuse to see cops murder citizens and walk free" as they march to protest the death of George Floyd on May 31 in Portland, Oregon. (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
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A woman holds up a sign that says "Our black children need a future" during a May 31 protest outside Cardiff Castle in Wales/ (credit:Matthew Horwood via Getty Images)
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During a Black Lives Matter protest in London's Hyde Park on June 3, a protester holds up a sign that says "White silence = Black death." (credit:Dan Kitwood via Getty Images)
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A protester holds a sign with the names of victims of police brutality during a rally in Coral Gables, Florida, on May 30. (credit:EVA MARIE UZCATEGUI via Getty Images)