BJ Penn’s mother Lorraine Singh has filed for a restraining order against her son after UFC legends were arrested twice for abuse of family and households in the past two days.
On Tuesday, MMA Fighting received a copy of the request for a restraining order filed in court, along with her events that led to Penn’s arrest. The request has just been filed, so the judge has not yet approved or rejected the order.
In a statement provided to the authorities, Singh details the allegations against him, identifying Penh as his son.
Singh claims that Penn “has been using extreme psychological abuse against me over the past few months. I’m not Lorrain Singh, I’m hoping to kill his family, take over the identity of my mother, and take me out of his home.”
Penn posted on his Instagram with an alert to Hiro Police, “I need your help. My mother Lorraine Singh, my brother Jay Dee Penn, my brother Reagan Penn and my brother Kalani Mamazuka, we are all murdered, so we need to investigate these people from my home and my property.”
At the request of the restraining order, Singh claims he has returned home from his May 11 trip to find “clothing, shoes, jewelry, personal belongings, all my belongings that have been removed from my bedroom.” After Penn denied that he knew where his mother’s belongings were, Singh filed a theft report with the police.
A few days later, a few days after May 16th, Singh claimed that “the driver’s license, credit card and lock for lock were stolen,” and she produced another theft report. Singh is said to have told her “All items in the safe belong to him.”
Singh says she installed deadbolt locks on the bedroom door along with security cameras both inside and outside the home. She claims she caught the pen being knocked down the camera, claiming “he put glue on my dead bolts as well and stopped opening my bedroom door.”
She called the police and claimed that Penn was told not to remove the camera and refused to place glue on the dead bolt lock.
On May 25th, Singh said he returned home from his weekend trip, with Penn saying, “I put duct tape on the video camera to block the video camera and put glue on the deadbolt in the bedroom door so that it doesn’t get into the bedroom.”
Singh claims that her son, Reagan Penn, can climb into the bedroom through the outside window and unlock the door so that she can enter. She then claims she checked her mailbox and she said there was nothing inside since the past few days she went on her trip and she says she asked Pen to receive the email.
Singh denied Penn receiving the mail, but then claims that that night she found her son in a friend’s car and saw the mail in the back seat. She claims that Penn denied it was her mail, leading to Singh contacting the police again.
Singh claims that he is allegedly pushed a bright flashlight into her face to prevent Pen from dialing police numbers on her cell phone.
“I tried to turn in several directions, but he kept blinding me with a flashlight,” Shin writes. “Then I grabbed my flashlight and tried to remove it from my face, then he grabbed my arm and pressed it against the four-door gray sedan.
“Reagan lives in two houses from me. Reagan ran through to help me. After that, I dialed 911 and dialed for help.”
Singh says that Penn was arrested and “given 48 hours” because he was “given 48 hours.”
The next morning, Singh claims she was upstairs when he hears the noise downstairs, and when he goes to investigate, she notices one of the sliding glass doors is open.
Singh says she found a pen as she walked towards the entrance door behind the house. She claims that Penn jumped into the same car as his friend and left.
Singh says that when police were called again, she later heard Penn discuss with her son Reagan at home. She says he was arrested again after showing police a video of Penn coming and going to her house for breach of a 48-hour period.
“I think my son (BJ Penn) suffers from a mental disorder that retains a mental disorder that has the delusion that his friend, spouse, parents and other close family members have been replaced by the same con artist.
“In my best interest in my safety, I will ask the court for six months (a temporary restraint order) and order my son to obtain treatment and other sources of treatment.”
Online records searches in Hawaii show that several legal cases have occurred, including Penn’s civil lawsuits and another restraining order approved by a judge to keep former UFC fighter jets away from women and two minor children.
Outside the video where Penn showed his first arrest on his Instagram account on May 25, he has not publicly addressed allegations against him or requests for restraining orders filed by his mother.
The 46-year-old Penn is widely regarded as one of the greatest fighters of all time, responsible for the championship rule in two different weight classes in the UFC. He last fought in 2019 when he was defeated seven times in a row at the UFC, prompting an exit from the promotion.