A former actuality TV star is accused of beating his cellmate to loss of life simply days earlier than he was scheduled to be launched, based on police.
Chad Aaron Ollinger, who rose to fame starring on Discovery Channel’s “Thriller at Blind Frog Ranch,” has been charged with killing his cellmate after guards on the Clark County Detention Middle in Nevada discovered his immobile physique on Friday.
The inmate, who was not recognized, was “affected by obvious blunt power accidents” after a bodily altercation contained in the cell, the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Division stated. He was declared lifeless on the scene regardless of efforts to avoid wasting him.
Ollinger, 41, was instantly taken into custody and re-booked for open homicide, cops stated.
He was attributable to be launched from jail on Jan. 12.
It’s not clear what sparked the violent brawl.
Ollinger is the son of Duane Ollinger, who owns the Blind Frog Ranch in Japanese Utah. All through the Discovery collection, which has run for 5 seasons, the pair and others seek for gold hidden within the huge networks of caves beneath the property.
Nonetheless, his authorized troubles started in November 2024, when he was arrested for evading police after fleeing on a bike after which on foot, based on data obtained by native outlet KFDA.
The Dumas, Texas native was indicted on these costs in Potter County, Texas January after which was arrested once more in February for driving with an invalid license in Grey County.
In July, Ollinger’s household reported him lacking in New Mexico, and he was entered into the Nationwide Crime Info Middle as a lacking individual. He was situated not lengthy afterwards in Albuquerque.
Ollinger was busted in Clark County, Nevada on Oct. 27 for contempt of court docket and booked on the Las Vegas jail.
A decide handed him a brief sentence on Dec. 18, and he was attributable to be launched on Jan. 12, 2026, based on jail data.
Ollinger is now being held with out bail and is scheduled to be arraigned on the brand new costs on Tuesday.
