The singer appeared on the Simon Cowell ITV talent series back in 2005
X Factor star Chico has been found guilty of drink-driving as he told a court his arrest came ‘hours after breaking his sobriety’.
Chico, whose real name is Yousseph Slimani, rose to fame on the Simon Cowell ITV talent series back in 2005. He finished in fifth place under the mentorship of Sharon Osbourne.
After his time on The X Factor, Slimani went on to score a number one single with his song It’s Chico Time. 2008 saw him come third on the ITV reality show CelebAir.
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But the former star was in court today (April 9) after he was caught drunk behind the wheel. Arriving in Willesden Magistrates’ Court, Slimani wore a maroon silk shirt and placed his cowboy hat on the table in front.
He told the hearing he drank Famous Grouse whisky for six hours after losing a third friend to cancer. He stated that he consumed the whisky between 1am and 7am and then Nyquil at 5.30pm – a cold and flu medicine similar to Night Nurse – before he was pulled over at about 6.30pm that evening on Chase Way, Southgate, on December 13.
“It was after a third bereavement of one of my dearest friends, which was just devastating,” he said before later telling the court he has not drunk alcohol since. “All young people in their 50s with terminal cancers that have passed on – non-smokers, non-drinkers, several cancers – and basically are not here, sadly.
“On that fateful day, I’m teetotal, I don’t drink, and it felt like I was going out of my mind, couldn’t take it, so I drank.”
Slimani claimed he had been taking Nyquil for ‘a flu which you may call long Covid’ that ‘kept coming and going’ and has been documented on his social media channels. He did not inform police when asked if he had consumed other drugs or medicines, and said this was ‘because when I got arrested, and they were taking me to the police station, my mind was literally going at 600,000mph’.
“And when I got to the police station all I could think of was the implications of me being arrested for something that goes completely against what I am and what I do,” he stated.
Saying that all his fears ‘sadly have all come true’, Slimani noted that these were of ‘the press, the loss of my reputation, the loss of work – everything has happened, it has been a catastrophe’.
Slimani brought a book with him for evidence, which he said he was writing at the time of the alleged offence, titled The Secret 19. Cancer Questions Worth Asking.
Slimani’s solicitors told a toxicologist that he consumed 810ml of Famous Grouse whisky and 30ml of an unspecified Nyquil product that contained alcohol, the court heard. The toxicologist, Sarah Morley, calculated that the Nyquil would have contributed to 2mg per 100ml of alcohol on his breath.
Ms Morley also told the court: “I can’t verify if the information provided to me has been accurate or not.”
Arresting officer Pc Yuksel stated he was watching Slimani speak to a fellow officer about a separate matter when he noticed the defendant’s ‘quite vivid’ facial expressions that were ‘almost joyful’.
Giving evidence, he said he smelt alcohol on the former singer’s breath, noting: “He was very animated with his facial features, they were very vivid and his demeanour seemed a bit – I don’t know how best to describe it – but under the influence of alcohol.
“I asked him if he had consumed any alcohol, then his demeanour changed… He appeared quite shocked and his demeanour just changed to very defensive, from very happy and expressive to very defensive when asked that question.”
Slimani failed a breath test but was ‘calm and compliant’ when he was arrested on suspicion of drink driving, he said. He was then taken to a police station and breathalysed again.
Slimani was convicted of driving a Vauxhall Astra with 40 microgrammes of alcohol in 100 millilitres of breath, when the legal limit is 35mg.
He was ordered to pay a £600 fine, £240 surcharge and £620 in costs by District Judge Mark Jabbitt. As a result of the conviction, Slimani was also disqualified from driving for 12 months. The court heard he has been heavily in debt and as a result faced county court proceedings.
Slimani was offered a drink drivers’ rehabilitation scheme that if completed will reduce his qualification by a quarter. The judge said: “It is inevitable that I will find the case proven.”
He added that he is ‘generally sympathetic’ to Slimani’s bereavements but not to excessive drinking or taking medication without checking the effect it has on driving.

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