

The caller identified “Yuri” as the person attempting to kill him, the sheriff’s office said, and authorities later found 1,900 pounds of processed marijuana at the house - not a huge amount by Mendocino standards, but not nothing. The caller escaped to a nearby house before deputies arrived, and despite chasing one suspect, none were apprehended. 18 (that’s Wa-la-la, if you want to sound like a local), with the caller saying armed people were in his home, one with an AR-15. The Mendocino Sheriff’s Department confirmed dispatchers received a call from the remote town of Gualala on Jan. In January, a local website in Mendocino reported that Andrade was a person of interest in a possible home invasion at the site of an illegal marijuana grow. He started a website, explaining he’d become a cannabis consultant in Northern California.

He donned the pink swimsuit for a stint snowboarding in Colorado and on a cliff overlooking an alpine lake, maybe Tahoe. Andrade posted it on his King Yuri Instagram account.ĭespite promising the judge he wouldn’t streak again, Andrade did.

Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson gave him a shout-out for pairing the onesie with neon yellow sneakers from the actor’s then-new line. Still, he seemed to revel in the attention. The online gambling company refused to pay up after Andrade admitted to the betting scheme in a radio interview. The guy they paid to film it actually returned their phone. Zdorovetskiy didn’t face any charges, since he hadn’t been involved in the actual streaking.ĭoug says Andrade’s a good guy, but since then, they’ve been “on two different paths.”Īndrade’s pink getup went viral, according to plan. Doug’s been doing his at the Boys and Girls Club in Florida. The two men were arrested and charged with misdemeanor trespassing, each receiving 100 hours of community service and one year of probation. “The slide into the end zone was pretty incredible,” the Gronk quipped. “I feel like that was exactly what we needed to complete the night,” Tampa Bay tight end Rob Gronkowski said in an interview later of Andrade’s run, throwing in a dig at the Chiefs’ single-digit performance. Then he heard the cheers, the stadium going nuts, and he knew Andrade had made it. “I was sober, but I mean, like, it all kind of went blurry,” he said.īut then he remembered he needed to get caught, so the guards would be focused on him, far away from Andrade. His vision went black at the edges, adrenaline roaring through his brain. As soon as he was close, he made the leap over, dropping about 12 feet onto the field. He asked the guard if he could take a picture at the fence, though he didn’t even have a camera. Then they made their way to the fence and “my boy was like, ‘All right, it’s time to go,’” Doug said.Īndrade broke left and Doug knew it was now or never. First, they hit up a stranger sitting near them to film it, giving him Andrade’s phone and offering $300 if the guy would take the video and return the phone later that night. When the fourth quarter started, the duo made their play. Andrade yelled, “F- off,” in the background when a friend answered his phone and I asked to speak with him. Zdorovetskiy didn’t reply to my request for an interview. Zdorovetskiy had paid for the tickets - spending 12 grand on them, Doug said. For the first three-quarters of the game, they were like any other fans - buying gear, hanging out.
