An All-Access Jay Z Tour Pass, A Fake Italian Name, and an Arrest at the Jay Z Show | Unfair Park | Dallas | Dallas Observer | The Leading Independent News Source in Dallas, Texas
Navigation

An All-Access Jay Z Tour Pass, A Fake Italian Name, and an Arrest at the Jay Z Show

Something clearly didn't quite wash with this Gian Carlo Donatelli guy. Here he was, inside a event-level area at the American Airlines Center, almost half an hour before the doors would open for the rest of Jay Z's ticket-holding fans Saturday night. He flashed a Magna Carter All-Access World Tour...
Share this:

Something clearly didn't quite wash with this Gian Carlo Donatelli guy. Here he was, inside a event-level area at the American Airlines Center, almost half an hour before the doors would open for the rest of Jay Z's ticket-holding fans Saturday night.

He flashed a Magna Carter All-Access World Tour pass and said he was director of A/R with Universal Music Group Italy. He'd been with the record label for 20 years, he told security. But nobody could figure out how he got in. He said he'd signed in with some "unknown" security guard, the police report says. Donatelli passed security another credential printed with "Genelec Auto Sales," which a cursory Google search indicates is a new and used car dealership in DeSoto.

The security folks smelled a counterfeit and called the cops. Donatelli told them Genelec was just an advertiser. He was a label exec with every right to be there.

The ruse fell apart when the a police officer demanded an actual ID. His Texas driver's license proved he wasn't Gian Carlo Donatelli after all. He was just plain old John Henry Johnson, 45, who was booked without incident into Lew Sterrett on suspicion of misdemeanor criminal trespassing.

He apparently missed one helluva show.

H/T The Smoking Gun

KEEP THE OBSERVER FREE... Since we started the Dallas Observer, it has been defined as the free, independent voice of Dallas, and we'd like to keep it that way. Your membership allows us to continue offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food, and culture with no paywalls. You can support us by joining as a member for as little as $1.