Celebrity chef Justin Sutherland was charged Monday after his arrest on allegations that he threatened to shoot his girlfriend last week in St. Paul and hit her with a gun.
Sutherland, 39, was charged in Ramsey County District Court with felony threats of violence in connection with the incident shortly after 8 p.m. Friday in the 800 block of Front Avenue, when police responded to a call about a man with a gun.
The woman told police that Sutherland pointed a gun and vowed to shoot her, choked her and struck her in the chest with the weapon, the criminal complaint read. Fearing for her life, she put up her hands and pleaded not to be shot, the complaint continued.
Officers arrested Sutherland during what turned out to be a second visit from police that evening concerning a report of domestic violence. While jailed, the criminal complaint read, Sutherland called the accusations a lie.
Sutherland appeared in court Monday morning and was released on his own recognizance and ordered to surrender to police any guns he owns within 24 hours. He’s due back in court Aug. 16.
His attorney, John Daly, told the Star Tribune the complaint “is riddled with falsehoods. He never physically assaulted anybody, never pointed a gun at anybody and never choked anybody. … Mr. Sutherland is a nonviolent, warm and energetic member of the community.”

Sutherland was the original executive chef for the Handsome Hog, a Southern-style restaurant in St. Paul that opened in 2016. He has severed ties with the eatery but has since opened a breakfast sandwich shop, Big E, on Grand Avenue in St. Paul.
He was also planning to open a new restaurant with his father, Kerry Sutherland, in the former space of the Golden Thyme Cafe in St. Paul’s Rondo neighborhood. Last month he announced plans to open Pearl & the Thief on the ground floor of the 22-story O2 Luxury Tower in Minneapolis’ Mill District.