Another 'A-List: Dallas' Cast Member Claims Assault

Jason St. Amand READ TIME: 2 MIN.

It seems that the cast members from Logo's reality show "A-List: Dallas" are magnets for abuse. In October, controversial cast member Taylor Garrett claimed that he was a victim of a "hate crime." The 27-year-old gay Republican said that someone threw a rock through his living room window. A threatening note was attached to the rock that said Garrett was an embarrassment to the LGBT community.

Last weekend, another "A-List" cast member, Levi Crocker, tweeted a picture of a head wound and claimed he had been attacked by four men at an Oklahoma City gay bar. Crocker says he was assaulted for being on the reality show and that his attackers were also gay.

"I got jumped in the middle of a bar in OKC, 4 guys, one busted a barstool on my head...I'm fine, I finished the fight Crocker wrote.

"I'll never forget that feeling tho. They weren't straight guys bullying me, they were gays...It's sad when str8 people are mean to someone gay. But for someone (or 4 ppl) from the gay community to attack me because of a show is ??????"

The Oklahoma city police reported that there is no record of Crocker filing a report about the attack. Local gay press contacted Crocker in search of more information about the incident but the reality star tweeted "I decided to leave this subject alone for now."

Crocker is a former rodeo cowboy who hung up his Stetson to pursue fashion design.

A few weeks before Crocker's attack Garrett claimed he was the victim of a hate crime. The reality star said that he was assaulted while attending a friend's birthday party in Dallas. The attacker wrote "Fuck Coulter" on his car and then allegedly struck Garrett, causing him to fall to the ground, cutting him up. The incident came a few days after Garrett had lunch with conservative icon Ann Coulter, EDGE reported in a Nov. 17 article.

A number of media outlets doubted Garrett's attacks, saying the reality star was trying to create controversy for the show's premiere and to boost ratings. Things only seemed more suspicious when he refused help from the Dallas Police Department's crime scene detectives.

After Garrett's second incident, even Crocker tweeted "who said I believed he was attacked."


by Jason St. Amand , National News Editor

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