Amanda Bynes took to her Instagram Stories early Thursday morning to accuse her fiance Paul Michael of using drugs and vandalizing his mother’s home.
The troubled actress, 36, spoke directly about their stories as she claimed he’s stopped taking his medication and watching disturbing porn, calling his “behaviour alarming” and revealing they “kicked” him out of their home have.
“I’m scared of what he’s going to do,” Amanda said, adding that she found his “stash of crack cocaine” and that he put “salmon under” his mother’s bed.
Just prior to her Instagram Stories, Paul called police to her home at 2:30 a.m. during a verbal argument with the star, accusing them of taking his Adderall and calling her “out of control,” according to TMZ.
The Latest: Amanda Bynes took to her Instagram Stories early Thursday morning to accuse her fiance Paul Michael of using drugs and vandalizing his mother’s home
Paul told officers she threw him out of the house, but he stayed there until they arrived, according to the outlet’s source at the LAPD.
He spoke to dispatchers and told them it was a verbal altercation.
According to the outlet, he reportedly took to his Instagram and said he didn’t know “what the hell she’s talking about.”
Hours earlier, Amanda had posted a snap of Paul to her stories as he lay on the couch.
Next, Amanda spoke directly to the camera and listed the allegations against her fiancé.
“Paul told me he was off his meds. I looked at his phone and he was watching mom and son porn.
Adding: “He trashed his mother’s house, he broke all her pictures and he put salmon under her bed. His behavior is alarming and I am afraid of what he will do.’
Shocking: The Anger actress spoke directly about her stories as she claimed he’s stopped taking his medication and viewing disruptive porn, calling his “behaviour alarming” and revealing that she “kicked” him out of her home
Allegations: “I’m scared of what he’s going to do,” Amanda said, adding that she found his “crack cocaine stash” and that he put “salmon under” his mother’s bed
“I forgot to mention I found Paul’s stash of crack cocaine. He has been using for the past six months. He needs serious house. I kicked him out of my house.’
Hours earlier, Paul was spotted smoking in their stories.
She deleted the stories of her allegations from her Instagram and posted a new one of her in the car, noting a correction.
Amanda said in the stories, which were published around 7am PST: “Correction. Paul was looking for milfs, moms and sons just showed up. I also went to CVS and bought a drug test. Paul tested clean. Paul is clean. Also, I had something between my teeth in the last video.’
Disturbing: Amanda next spoke directly into the camera and listed the allegations against her fiancé
Allegations: Amanda said in her Stories: ‘Paul told me he stopped taking his meds. I looked at his phone and he was watching mom and son porn.
Before: Amanda shared a glamorous video of herself on Wednesday night
Her fiancé: Paul appeared in her stories a day before smoking
On Tuesday, Amanda released her second song with Paul, titled “Fairfax.”
Two weeks earlier, Amanda released a clip of her single titled Diamonds that she had made with Paul.
Amanda and Paul met in a sober dorm in late 2019 and got engaged the following year.
What I Like About You star’s attorney David A. Esquibias told ET that Amanda and Michael put the track together during the early stages of the coronavirus pandemic shutdown.
The shocking allegations come just a month after a conservatory her parents had headed since 2013 was terminated in Ventura County Superior Court in Oxnard, California.
New: Amanda released her second song with Paul titled “Fairfax” on Tuesday
Couple: Two weeks earlier, Amanda released a clip of her single titled Diamonds that she did with Paul
“The court finds that guardianship is no longer required and that the grounds for establishing guardianship of the person no longer exist,” Judge Roger Lund said in court filings last month.
Amanda was placed under the conservatory in 2013 amid a series of legal, mental health, and substance abuse issues.
Last month, the judge said the actress had proven she was able to deal with her health issues without supervision from her parents, who did not object to the change of plan.
When the conservatory was first introduced in 2013, the star’s parents, Rick and Lynn Bynes, said in court they were concerned Amanda could harm herself or others if they weren’t able to oversee her medical affairs and finances .
Her parents said they were concerned she might have potentially dangerous plastic surgery and told the court the actress believed she was being monitored by her vehicle’s dashboard and smoke detectors in her home.
Legal: The shocking allegations come just a month after a conservatory her parents had headed since 2013 was terminated in Ventura County Superior Court in Oxnard, California
Amanda told ET after the ruling that she is focused on her education and working on a fragrance product she plans to launch in the future.
“I’m pursuing my bachelor’s degree at FIDM studying Creative Industry Studies with a concentration in Beauty Marketing and Product Development,” Amanda told the outlet, noting that she “traveled to New York in June to work on the development of a fragrance. ‘
Amanda rose to fame at age 13 on Nickelodeon’s The Amanda Show as a child star and later found success on shows like All That and What I Like About You. She has also appeared in films such as She’s the Man, What a Girl Wants and Hairspray, with her last motion picture appearance being in 2010’s Easy A.
She said on Twitter earlier this year that she was retiring from her acting career, writing, “Being an actress isn’t as fun as it might seem. If I don’t love something anymore, I stop doing it. I don’t like acting anymore, so I quit.”
Wow: Bynes rose to fame as a child star at age 13 on Nickelodeon’s The Amanda Show and later found success on shows like All That and What I Like About You. She has also appeared in films such as She’s the Man, What a Girl Wants and Hairspray, with her last motion picture appearance being in 2010’s Easy A