NEWS

Rush Guitarist Lifeson Sues and Speaks

Written by Eric Olsen
Published June 10, 2005

Rush guitarist Alex Lifeson (Zivojinovich), his son Justin, and daughter-in-law Michelle are seeking unspecified monetary damages in a federal suit against the Naples, Florida Ritz-Carlton, its security director and three sheriff's deputies for injuries, pain and suffering, mental anguish and the costs of his defence in the criminal case that resulted from a festive New Year's Eve soire gone badly awry (details here).

Though Lifeson was initially booked on six charges, including four felonies that could have landed him in prison up to 30 years, the D.A. eventually reduced the charges to two counts of assault on a law enforcement official. A deal was reached with prosecutors in April whereby the charges against the guitarist and his son were reduced to misdemeanors and each was given a suspended sentence, received a year of probation and was ordered to pay court costs and restitution. If they successfully complete their probation, there will be no formal conviction on their records.

In conjuntion with the suit, Lifeson issued this statement yesterday:

"In like a lion, out like a lamb. These words appeared in a Naples Daily News editorial on April 27, describing the outcome of the criminal charges against my family and myself. After fifteen months of living in fear and anxiety, and the enormous physical and emotional toll that it took from all of us, the prosecution's case began to crumble as the truth emerged and witnesses came forward to expose the behavior of these Collier County Sheriff's Deputies and certain employees of the Ritz Carlton, a resort hotel reputed to be one of the finest in the world.

"As that part of this ordeal came to a close, I thought to myself that more than anything, I wanted to get my life back on track. I thought I could accept the fact that I was punched in the face so hard it ripped the cartilage from my nose, fracturing the bone and shattering my septum. I thought I could accept the incredibly painful nasal surgery and weeks of recovery, and the discomfort I feel every night when I go to sleep. I thought I could accept the fact that I was Tasered six times, twice while lying face down in a growing pool of my own blood, and so severely that it burned bloody holes in my back. I thought I could accept watching my son get electrocuted numerous times as well, and erase the memory of his screams of pain and terror.

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Rush Guitarist Lifeson Sues and Speaks
Published: June 10, 2005
Type: News
Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: News, Politics: Law and Rights
Writer: Eric Olsen
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Comments

#1 — June 10, 2005 @ 12:13PM — peter wright

Way to go, Alex. This guy is speaking the truth.

#2 — June 10, 2005 @ 12:45PM — Eric Olsen

his version of it anyway, which appears to be ending up closer to "the truth" than the other side's

#3 — June 10, 2005 @ 13:35PM — Patti

I've been following this case since the beginning, and while I was quite willing to give the police the benefit of the doubt in the beginning, as it went through the courts and was gutted, it became apparent the the Zivojinovichs were subjected to pointless, mindless violence because the officers were in the mood for a fight. The police have equivocated time and time again, and that was proven quite nicely when the prosecution put only one of the three officers involved on the stand. Why? Because their statements conflicted, adand poking holes in the case was already so easy.

Tell me, if Alex had actually pushed a cop down the stairs, would they really have let him off with no conviction? Would the judge have reduced Justin's charge to resisting arrest without violence, implying in his statement that even that charge might not even be justified? Would another judge have thrown out Michelle's case entirely, calling her arrest illegal? Would the only unbiased witness in the stairwell call their treatment 'extreme brutality'?

By the way, Alex is no spoiled rock star. he has been made an Officer of the Order of Canada, the Canadian equivalent of knighthood, for charity work. he has raised literally millions for various charities, including AIDS hospices, Toronto Hospital for Sick Children, food pantries, the Red Cross, and more. He is known for his kindness and generosity. He is married to the woman he began dating when they were fifteen. He is not some kind of stereotypical metalhead.

#4 — June 10, 2005 @ 13:45PM — Eric Olsen

as I said, his side seems to be coming out ahead

#5 — June 10, 2005 @ 14:16PM — Rob

Couldn't agree more with Patti's comments. I remember, after hearing this story when it happened, how out of character it seemed for Alex. I don't ever remember hearing anything negative about him or the other members of Rush. They've always been well respected. Good for Alex for standing up for his and his family's rights.

#6 — June 10, 2005 @ 15:51PM — Dawn

I almost always tend to err on the side of law enforcement, as I find that most of them really do want to act in the best interest of the badge and the community, but based on the total lack of prior aggression from the accused and the overall tone and articulation of Lifeson's statement, these officers sound like the kind we would be better off without "serving and protecting."

#7 — June 10, 2005 @ 15:57PM — Eric Olsen

uniform sniffer

#8 — June 10, 2005 @ 16:35PM — Lono [URL]

Oh, those wacky Canadians!

#9 — June 10, 2005 @ 17:08PM — Eric Olsen

all that hockey makes 'em violent

#10 — June 10, 2005 @ 23:11PM — Patti

Thanks, Eric, for posting this....you're getting credit from other sites as the originator!

#11 — June 11, 2005 @ 13:06PM — Eric Olsen

well that's a very fine thing

#12 — June 12, 2005 @ 12:37PM — Edu

Well if he kicked the female deputy downstairs, that was his best action. If I was there I'd still kick her face as soon as she landed her fat ass in the floor.

#13 — June 12, 2005 @ 12:46PM — Patti

He didn't kick anyone down the stairs. He was running upstairs to help his son, who was being tased. One cop punched him in the face and tore the nasal cartilage off and broke the bones. He went on, and the female cop, who was three steps above him, grabbed him by the throat and then lost her balance. They both fell down the stairs. Alex was then jumped on and tased at least six times. (This from the assistant manager of the Ritz-Carlton, who saw it. Check the Naples Daily News for more info.)

Alex performed recently at a benefit for the White Ribbon campaign to end violence against women. He's been a longtime supporter. I seriously doubt he'd intentionally kick anyone down the stairs for revenge.

#14 — November 6, 2005 @ 13:57PM — mickey

To get tased 6 times is excessive. To get tased twice while lying face down in your own blood is revolting. To get punched in the face twice and hard enough to shatter your nose is painful. To be grabbed by the neck and pushed down a flight of stairs by a female deputy is shocking. To read police statements after the incident and then compare them to the officer's later sworn depositions is confusing. To discover that out of 16 hotel security cameras, 3 weren't "operational", the very 3 in the area where the family was attacked, is revealing. To read the 911 call transcript made by hotel security where they stated, "they're standing on the tables throwing cutlery and tearing the place apart" when in fact the family was peacefully finishing their dinner, is infuriating. To find out that the deputy who tased Justin, and then Alex twice, was an employee of the Ritz just before entering the police force, and what a "coincidence" it is that he showed up, is disquieting. To read the dozen or so sworn statements of hotel dinner guests from that evening who say Alex was not intoxicated and the fact that the police have no evidence of intoxication, is curious. To read Judy's comments when she had only met the family for brief seconds earlier that evening is thoughtful. To read the Ritz employee's eyewitness account of the brutaliy instigated by the police is infuriating. To read comments from the ignorant who were not there and choose to base their speculation on personal biases is meaningless. To have the year probation terminated 6 months early is mildly restorative. To commit to action so that the many others who find themselves in this sort of authority-abuse situation is hopeful. This thing's a long way from being over yet.

#15 — March 11, 2006 @ 21:03PM — New world Man

To see the truth come out is refreshing. I have been a fan of Rush since 1980 and have seen them on every tour since the begining of the 1990's and once back in 1982 and I was shocked to say the least and initally I was willing to give the police the benefit of the doubt but now that witness have come forward I hope that Alex and his family will get justice to them that they so richly deserve and they will get the compensation they so deserve.

#16 — August 25, 2006 @ 01:19AM — Power Windows, not power cops!

I cannot believe Alex, nor his family, would ever act in such a way. Tasered 6 TIMES? Punched in the face? Imprisoned for 2 DAYS without a phone call for over 14 hours? They don't treat people like this in Guantanamo! The cops were out of control and obviously bored. So were the Ritz employees. Was this "protecting and serving? Why weren't the police POLICING THEIR OWN?!

Alex has no history of ever being violent. This whole case is a sham and a travesty. Alex and his family are NOT the criminals here! The cops and the Ritz employees were the "violent ones". I hope Alex and his family get everything they deserve and are owed.

#17 — May 6, 2007 @ 15:17PM — Roland [URL]

It's been years since this happened but I think Alex is still going forward with his case against them. I am so glad! One of his comments is (paraphrased), "How many people without fame or fortune behind them does this happen to?" Couldn't agree more. If this happened to a rich, jet-set rock star, you know it happens to many others without the resources to fight it. They are forced to endure the pain and humiliation and threats against their freedom and can do next-to-nothing about it. This is America for God's sake. The police HAVE to take responsibility for their actions and we cannot allow violent people to use a police uniform as a shield against responsibility for violent and destructive acts. We also cannot allow our court system to turn a blind eye and call these acts of "sanctioned violence" to be "within the realm of proper police behavior". I find this whole thing to be deeply disturbing and am very happy to see Alex is not letting this go. His other comment, again paraphrased, was, "Maybe I'll make this easier for the next guy." Go get'em Alex!!!

#18 — December 17, 2007 @ 11:46AM — TruthHurtz

mickey,

You didn't read the sworn statements. Don't speak as if you did. Lifeson was out of control. Period.

#19 — May 9, 2008 @ 18:39PM — Jason

Stop whining because you got dished by the police. I find it hard to believe that a private hotel, with minimum wage employees and two different govenment entities, one of which is entirely neutral in the matter, fabricated this whole story. I highly doubt that a bunch of cops with families and pensions are going to pick a wealthy musician with with tons of time and attorneys to "pick on" ...Granted I wasn't there, but I find it hard to believe.

#20 — May 11, 2008 @ 12:13PM — Dickhead who always trusts authority

You stink

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