Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Beverly Hills apologizes to Celtics star Jaylen Brown amid dispute over All-Star Game event shutdown

The City of Beverly Hills initially claimed the event had been shut down due to not having a permit

Jaylen Brown has received an apology from the City of Beverly Hills
Jaylen Brown has received an apology from the City of Beverly Hills (AP)

The City of Beverly Hills has issued an apology to Boston Celtics star Jaylen Brown after admitting it provided "inaccurate information" regarding the shutdown of an event he hosted on the eve of the NBA All-Star Game.

The city's initial claim that the gathering lacked a permit was retracted in a statement posted to Instagram on Thursday.

"Upon further internal review, the City has determined that its prior public communication contained inaccurate information," the statement read.

It clarified that "specifically, no permit application was submitted nor denied for the event and the residence does not have any prior related violations on record." This marked a significant shift from earlier assertions.

However, Brown's company, Jaylen Brown Enterprises, responded later on Thursday via the X platform, taking issue with another aspect of the city's statement.

Brown’s team are still not fully satisfied with Beverly Hills’ new statement
Brown’s team are still not fully satisfied with Beverly Hills’ new statement (AP)

While acknowledging the clarification, the company disputed the city's continued insistence that the event, which promoted Brown's performance brand 741 and was held at Oakley founder Jim Jannard’s home, was ultimately shut down due to a perceived code violation.

"No alleged proof of any violation was ever produced to the homeowner, our team or legal counsel," the statement asserted.

"Without observation, documentation, or confirmed violations, enforcement action based on belief alone raises serious due-process concerns."

This latest exchange follows a series of conflicting accounts. On Sunday, Beverly Hills had told The Boston Globe that a permit application was submitted and denied "due to previous violations associated with events at the address," leading to the event's shutdown.

Brown had previously countered this to ESPN, stating: "That was not true. We didn’t need a permit because the owner of the house, that was his space.

“We were family friends. He opened up the festivities to us so we didn’t have to. We never applied for one."

Jaylen Brown Enterprises concluded its statement by indicating it remains "open to a constructive resolution with the City of Beverly Hills."

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in