The reality star claimed a camel bit her as she was feeding one from her car, prompting zoo employees to call 911.
As authorities from the Crockett County Sheriff’s Department arrived on the scene, they were met with an overbearing smell coming from her and Brian’s car.
Amy and Brian were each charged with illegal possession of Schedule I and Schedule VI drugs, along with two counts of child endangerment.
The two were taken into custody at the Crockett County Jail and were released on Tuesday on a $10,000 bond each.
Crockett County Sheriff’s Department public information officer Stephen Sutton said Amy’s brother, Chris Combs, bonded them out together.
Amy and Brian were seen holding hands while leaving the jail, with Brian keeping his head down to avoid cameras.
The two were arraigned on the charges on Thursday morning, as first reported by Action News 5 .
Amy is set to appear back in Crockett County Court on November 7.
DETAILS ON HER ARREST
In a Labor Day outing gone wrong, Amy claimed to have been bitten by a camel and needed an ambulance.
When cops arrived for protocol, they searched Amy and Brian’s vehicle after detecting a suspicious odor.
“An employee at the safari park called 911 reporting that they needed an ambulance because someone had been bit by a camel,” Sutton explained in a statement.
“EMS have been dealing with the injury and the police are dealing with the illegal substances that were in plain view.”
Amy Slaton's Arrest
The 1000-Lb. Sisters star was booked into Crockett County Jail in Tennessee on Monday, September 2.
The TLC star spent her Labor Day at Tennessee Safari Park with her friend Brian Lovvorn and two small children.
The drive-through park allows people to feed the zoo animals from their cars.
A staffer at the zoo called 911, claiming Amy had been bitten by a camel and was bleeding.
Police arrived on the scene, where Amy said she was bit and was taken away on a stretcher.
Authorities were immediately met with an overwhelming odor from Amy and Brian’s car.
They discovered marijuana and psilocybin mushrooms inside the vehicle.
Amy and Brian were each arrested and charged with drug possession and child endangerment.
They were booked into Crockett County Jail and were released soon after on a $10,000 bond each.
Tennessee Safari Park co-owner Claude Conley refuted the claims that Amy had ever been bit.
In arrest warrants exclusively obtained by The U.S. Sun, Amy was revealed to have had magic mushrooms and 80 grams of marijuana in the vehicle.
Sheriff officials said that two kids under eight were present at the time.
Despite Amy leaving the zoo on a stretcher, Tennessee Safari Park co-owner Claude Conley denied the claims that she had been bitten by one of their animals.
“We dispute that Amy was bitten by a camel because there is no bruising,” Claude told The U.S. Sun.
“She cut her arm on something, it’s not consistent with an animal bite.”
Claude said Brian got mad when he saw the police and only wanted an ambulance to show up for assistance.
He also claimed Brian started acting differently when the police noticed a smell coming from his and Amy’s car.
“They started smelling his vehicle and with the way he was acting, that’s when they arrested him,” he explained.
The owner also defended his safari park, saying they had not had any incidents since opening seven years ago.
“We’ve got over 2,800 exotic animals here, including giraffes, antelopes and deer – everything you can think of, just no big cats,” Claude said.
“We set up the park in 2007 and we have never had any incidents with the camels even though we have 300,000 visitors every year.”
Claude said his manager told him Amy had already been to the park multiple times before and “never had a problem.”
Amy should lose child custody, she should be placed in a facility until she gets mentally, physically and spiritually right. Presently, she's a friggin MESS! Those kids are in severe DANGER! Just think, if she's in this condition now, just wait til those kids are taken from her. She SERIOUSKY go off the deep end!
Get updates delivered to you daily. Free and customizable.
It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency:
Our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. As a platform hosting over 100,000 pieces of content published daily, we cannot pre-vet content, but we strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation.