Victoria Jones admitted she was under the influence of cocaine when she was arrested months before her tragic death on New Year’s Day.
According to court documents obtained by the San Francisco Standard, Tommy Lee Jones’ daughter told a Napa County sheriff’s deputy about her drug use during a medical checkup on April 26, 2025.
Documents say a plastic bag containing a white substance believed to be cocaine was in her pocket when she was charged with being under the influence, possession of a controlled substance and resisting arrest.
Additionally, officers noticed dried blood around Jones’ nose, the newspaper reported.
As Page Six previously reported, the actress was arrested on these charges in April, although she has pleaded not guilty.
A few months earlier, in February, Napa police officers were called to Jones’ home on a report of domestic violence, Napa sheriff’s spokesman Henry Wofford told the Standard.
The alleged victim asked law enforcement officers to intervene because he “felt the situation was escalating during the argument.”
However, Wofford claimed that no charges were pursued and that the caller simply wanted the incident documented.
Wofford acknowledged that Jones’ domestic violence arrest in June involved the same victim as the February incident.
The Daily Mail identified the victim as Jones’ husband, Nabek Sejas, 44, who has maintained his innocence.
A spokesperson for the Napa Valley Sheriff’s Office did not immediately respond to Page Six for comment.
TMZ reported that Jones is also charged with being under the influence of toluene in a public place in May 2025.
Toluene is defined by the National Library of Medicine as a “colorless liquid with a distinctive odor” that can be used by “solvent abusers” to “obtain a euphoric feeling.”
Meanwhile, Jones was found dead at the Fairmont in San Francisco around 3 a.m. Thursday. She was 34 years old.
Her official cause of death has not yet been announced. However, she was reportedly seen taking cocaine before her death.
If you or a loved one is affected by any of the issues raised in this article, please call SAMHSA’s national helpline at 1-800-662-HELP (4357).
