Rapper MC Hammer launched a string of tweets
Saturday with his side of the story two days after he was arrested in northern
California for allegedly obstructing an officer.
Among his tweets, Hammer said, apparently referring
to the arresting officer that he was asked whether he was on parole or
probation before the man tried to pull him out of his vehicle Thursday night.
Police in Dublin, east of Oakland, said Hammer was
in a vehicle with expired registration and he was not the registered owner.
"After asking Hammer who the registered owner
was he became very argumentative and refused to answer the officer's
questions," police spokesman Herb Walters wrote Saturday evening in an
e-mail to CNN.
Hammer -- a rap and dance icon in the late
1980s and 1990s -- was arrested on suspicion of resisting an officer and
obstructing an officer in the performance of his duties, according to police
spokesman Herb Walters.
The incident occurred at the Hacienda Crossings shopping center.
Hammer began his tweets Saturday with "chubby elvis looking
dude was tapping on my car window, I rolled down the window and he said 'Are
you on parole or probation?'"
"While I was handing him my ID he reached in my car and tried
to pull me out the car but forgot he was on a steady donut diet," Hammer
continued. "It was comical to me until he pulled out his guns, blew his
whistle and yelled for help (MallCop) !!! But make no mistake he's
dangerous."
Hammer, 50, was booked and released on bail from Santa Rita Jail,
Walters said. A court date is next month, and police have until that time to
decide on any charges.
No drugs or alcohol were suspected in the incident, police said.
In another tweet, Hammer, born Stanley Kirk Burrell, said,
"only thing more dangerous than a scared man with a gun, is a scared man
with an agenda, a gun and a badge."
"I will now answer his question, contrary to his personal
beliefs, all people of color are not on parole or probation fat boy!!!,"
wrote Hammer, later adding he thought of his arrest as "a teachable
moment" and an "eye opener."
Hammer, who had a hit single in 1990 with "U Can't Touch
This," has been enjoying a resurgence in his career and took the stage
with "Gangnam Style" Korean performer Psy during the American Music
Awards last November.
Hammer performed "Too Legit to Quit," which was released
more than 20 years ago.
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