Lisa Robin Kelly Arrested for Alleged DUI
TMZ reports that police responded to complaints that a car was parked on the 5 freeway, blocking a lane of traffic late in the evening. The authorities encountered Kelly on the scene and took her into custody after the 43-year-old failed a field sobriety test.
Actress Lisa Robin Kelly, famous for her work in the sitcom “That ’70s Show” with Topher Grace, Mila Kunis and Ashton Kutcher, was arrested by California Highway Patrol Saturday night, June 22 for allegedly driving under influence.
Lisa Robin Kelly played sister, Laurie, to Topher Grace’s character Eric Forman on That 70s Show.
TMZ reports that police responded to complaints that a car was parked on the 5 freeway, blocking a lane of traffic late in the evening. The authorities encountered Kelly on the scene and took her into custody after the 43-year-old failed a field sobriety test.
In 2010, Kelly was sentenced to 12 months of probation after pleading guilty to drunk driving. She has been plagued by domestic abuse allegations as well, according to TMZ.
Her other on-screen credit included “Charmed”, “Married … With Children” and “The X-Files”.
Cliffside Malibu Treatment Center’s Dr. Damon Raskin, addiction medicine specialist, is a former child actor and commented on the Lisa Robin Kelly arrest.
“Lisa Robin Kelly clearly needs help, and I hope she gets it before she hurts herself or others. This star is displaying wreckless behavior, and she would best be served by going into an inpatient program to get to the root of why she continues the pattern of self- destruction.”
Cliffside Malibu Treatment Center (www.cliffsidemalibu.com) was featured on the Katie Couric Show, Fox News, KTLA, The Insider, Good Morning America, The Hollywood Reporter, Psychology Today, Forbes, and Medical Daily.
You can tune into KABC TalkRadio 790 AM every Saturday at 5 p.m. to hear Cliffside Malibu CEO Richard Taite and Dr. Damon Raskin discuss addiction, alcoholism, dual diagnoses, and answer questions from callers on their show, “Ending Addiction for Good.”