(Getty Images)
HOLLYWOOD -- While riding a motorcycle around Hollywood Saturday with paparazzi in tow, actor Brad Pitt clipped a parked car's side mirror and dropped his bike, but was uninjured.
Los Angele police, who typically do not come to accident scenes where no one is injured, apparently have no record of the accident.
Radar Online reported that a paparazzo bumped into Pitt's bike from behind, sending the bike forward into a parked car at a slow speed.
TMZ reported Pitt was weaving through stopped traffic when he clipped a parked car, and that no one else was involved in the accident.
The mega-star fell to the ground, but was uninjured.
Following the accident, Pitt reportedly escaped photographers by running through a nearby apartment building, where the manager blocked the paparazzi.
Multiple law enforcement agencies in the area, including police in Hollywood and Beverly Hills and sheriff's deputies in West Hollywood, said they are not able to confirm the report.
Last year, Los Angeles City Councilman Dennis Zine, who is a former motorcycle cop, proposed an ordinance that would create a personal "protection zone" around celebrities, but the idea fizzled when police Chief Bill Bratton said it would be nearly impossible to enforce.
Los Angele police, who typically do not come to accident scenes where no one is injured, apparently have no record of the accident.
Radar Online reported that a paparazzo bumped into Pitt's bike from behind, sending the bike forward into a parked car at a slow speed.
TMZ reported Pitt was weaving through stopped traffic when he clipped a parked car, and that no one else was involved in the accident.
The mega-star fell to the ground, but was uninjured.
Following the accident, Pitt reportedly escaped photographers by running through a nearby apartment building, where the manager blocked the paparazzi.
Multiple law enforcement agencies in the area, including police in Hollywood and Beverly Hills and sheriff's deputies in West Hollywood, said they are not able to confirm the report.
Last year, Los Angeles City Councilman Dennis Zine, who is a former motorcycle cop, proposed an ordinance that would create a personal "protection zone" around celebrities, but the idea fizzled when police Chief Bill Bratton said it would be nearly impossible to enforce.

