Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Bond Remains at $1M for Racist Streamer ‘Chud the Builder’ in Shooting Incident Outside Tennessee Courthouse


WVLV.TV:

Circuit Court Judge William Goodman III ruled that the $1 million bond for Dalton Eatherly will remain in his attempted homicide case involving a shooting outside of a Clarksville courthouse. Eatherly, a controversial streamer known as “Chud the Builder” online, was in court in Montgomery County on Wednesday afternoon. 
 
Judge Goodman ruled that his bond will remain at $1 million and if he bonds out, Eatherly will have a curfew and must remain in his home from 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. Earlier in Davidson County Court, Eatherly’s attorney appeared in front of a Nashville judge in the case of the streamer being charged with theft (under $1,000), disorderly conduct and resisting arrest stemming from an incident at a downtown restaurant in early May. 
 
Eatherly reportedly ordered $400 worth of food at Bob’s Steak and Chop and didn’t pay for it, according to an arrest affidavit. The controversial streamer posted about it on his platforms and claimed he was asked to leave and refused to pay because he had not finished his meal. Eatherly was not in court due to him remaining in custody in Montgomery County.

So basically, at a bond hearing, some racist by the name of Alex Rosen testified that he was willing to contribute $100,000 toward CTB’s bond and provided personal bank statements to demonstrate his financial resources, explaining that he operates through a personal account tied to his social media ventures rather than a business account. Prosecutors also detailed events that occurred outside the courthouse on the day of the shooting, consistent with previously reported accounts, and indicated that video footage from a livestream may eventually become evidence. Efforts to secure CTB’s release through a proposed $1 million financial guarantee from Duel were rejected after concerns were raised about the legitimacy of the funds, with the judge ruling that gambling-related money from a foreign entity could not be used in Tennessee. As a result, the judge upheld the $1 million bond, noting that bonding companies are limited to covering $100,000 each, meaning Chud would need ten separate bonding companies to secure release. So even if Rosen contributed $500,000, Dalton would still need five bonding companies willing to cover the remaining amount. Well, ain't karma a bitch.

RELATED: ‘Chud the Builder’ could face unusual difficulty bailing out of jail in Tennessee. Here’s why.

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Bond Remains at $1M for Racist Streamer ‘Chud the Builder’ in Shooting Incident Outside Tennessee Courthouse

WVLV.TV : Circuit Court Judge William Goodman III ruled that the $1 million bond for Dalton Eatherly will remain in his attempted homicide...