Sandra Bullock Came Face-to-Face with Stalker, Joshua Corbett Caught Outside the Actress’ Bedroom
Known as Sandra Bullock's stalker, Joshua Corbett was caught outside the Hollywood actress' bedroom door after she called 911 at one in the morning. Corbett was arrested last June 8 but pleaded not guilty to breaking into the home of the "Miss Congeniality" actress but has been charged with possessing an arsenal of heavy weapons found in his home.
"At 1 AM she hears a loud banging inside the house. Bullock goes to her bedroom door to close and lock it and she sees Corbett right there in the hallway wearing dark clothing," TMZ reports. "Bullock slams the door shut, locks it and calls 911. She told cops she had showered before going to bed, so he may have been there the whole time."
When the cops arrived at Bullock's home, Corbett started screaming and pleading for Sandra not to press charges. He was carrying a notebook with magazine cut-outs of the actress, including a handwritten notes that said: "I will forever be thinking of you and Louie, my son, as you are my wife by law, the law of God and you belong to me and me to you."
The 39-year-old is currently charged with 19 felony counts including seven counts of possessing a machine gun, two counts of possessing an assault weapon and 10 counts of possessing a destructive device, according to Daily Mail.
With so many charges against him, the bail was set at $2 million and if convicted with new charges he could face up to 12 years in prison. But with all his weapons, there is no claim that Corbett brought any of those destructive devices onto Bollocks home.
His first attempt to see the actress face-to-face was on June 15 when he allegedly entered the actress' West Los Angeles home by climbing over a chain-link, barbed wire fence around 5 A.M. The police responded to a 911 call at 6:30 A.M and did not disclose whether Sandra's son Louis was present at the time.
He was reportedly "checking out the house" when the police arrived and pleaded not guilty to the charges, so the judge set his bond at $185,000.