Jailhouse Rock! Troubled Lisa Marie Presley's Brother Secretly Arrested For DUI
July 24 2019, Updated 3:13 p.m. ET
Lisa Marie Presley isn’t the only member of the famous family to run into a battle with the bottle.
The 51-year-old recovering addict’s younger brother was arrested for DUI in 2009, RadarOnline.com has learned exclusively.
Navarone Anthony Garibaldi, who’s Priscilla Presley’s son with her former lover, Marco Garibaldi, was arrested November 8, 2009, in Beverly Hills and charged with driving under the influence and driving while having a .08% or higher blood alcohol level — he had a .13% BAC level at the time — according to court documents.
The first-time offender originally pleaded not guilty to the charges in 2010. He got off fairly easy when the first charge was dismissed by the court. However, a judge found Navarone guilty of the second offense after he pleaded no contest.
Navarone, now 32, was sentenced to 36 months of probation and was approved to complete a three-month alcohol and drug prevention program in Santa Cruz, Calif., where the singer-songwriter formed the rock band Them Guns.
Priscilla has had to endure her fair share of family dramas over the years, especially with Lisa Marie, who she has worried will face the same fate as Elvis and will die an early, drug-ravaged death.
The King of Rock and Roll was found slumped dead in a bathroom in August 1977 after years of gorging on junk food and abusing prescription drugs led to a heart attack.
Even Lisa Marie has said she’s “grateful to be alive today” after opening up for the first time about her devastating addictions.
The singer-songwriter has acknowledged knowing people “wonder how, after losing people close to me, I also fell prey to opioids,” according to a foreword she wrote for the new book, The United States of Opioids: A Prescription for Liberating a Nation in Pain.
The mom to 10-year old twins Harper and Finley with her ex-husband Michael Lockwood, also revealed it “only took a short-term prescription of opioids” when she was recovering from childbirth “for me to feel the need to keep taking them.”