Actor Tom Sizemore Fails Drug Test with Fake Penis
--------------------------------------------------
Actor Tom Sizemore has been jailed for violating his probation by
failing a drug test after he was caught trying to use a prosthetic
penis to fake the results, a Los Angeles County prosecutor said on
Friday.
Sizemore, 43, who played a battle-hardened sergeant in the war movie
"Saving Private Ryan," was placed in custody on Thursday. He was
ordered to remain behind bars until a hearing on Feb. 24, unless he
posts $25,000 bond, Deputy District Attorney Sean Carney said.
Last month, Judge Antonio Baretto had agreed to allow Sizemore to
travel to Cambodia to shoot a new film on condition that he pass a drug
test every day prior to his departure.
Carney said the actor's failed attempt to fake his drug test results
came on the first day of the new requirement.
The actor is required to undergo random drug tests as a condition of
probation for his convictions on separate charges of methamphetamine
possession and beating his ex-girlfriend, former Hollywood madam Heidi
Fleiss.
During Thursday's proceedings, prosecutors told Judge Baretto that
Sizemore failed three drug tests in three days, the first after he was
caught using a fake penis sewn into his boxer shorts and filled with a
clean urine sample kept warm by a heating pack.
Carney said the ruse was revealed when the temperature of the sample
proved too cool to have come from Sizemore's body, and he was asked to
remove his pants.
According to prosecutors, Sizemore had been caught once before trying
to use a similar device, sold over the Internet under the brand name
the Whizzinator, and had failed drug tests on at least five occasions.
Carney said two drug tests on the days following the fake penis
incident showed Sizemore had methamphetamine in his system.
During the hearing, Sizemore's lawyer told the court that his client
was destitute, living in a garage in Whittier, California, and that he
was an expectant father, Carney told Reuters.
But Baretto told Sizemore that his drug use was "out of control,"
adding, "I had hoped and wanted to see a positive performance."