Where can I find more details about this?
Was he yelling at the man with the girl? Did the restaurant staff tell him to leave, or did he just stomp out?
We only have Lucas's word that the glass was thrown at a wall.
For obvious reasons, not least of which are his desire to conceal aspects of his past which make him look horrible, Lucas concocted this story which, he feels, casts his bad actions in the best possible light, while still explaining the end of the relationship.
I dont believe it.
Lucas says that he broke Suzanne's rule, by being violent. Why would she have had to make such a rule, unless he had been violent before?
Also, I find it unlikely that one would end up with a domestic violence conviction for throwing an object at a wall, and not injuring anyone.
I think Lucas got into a physical altercation with Suzanne at the restaurant, and the fact that it happened at a restaurant, and was in relation to a man with a younger woman, is the only bit of truth that Lucas has revealed. Come on, he blames the whole incident on drinking too many sugary soft drinks. That's obvious bullshit right there. Why should we believe any of the rest of it?
I think he hit her. I think he probably did it more than once. The first time it happened, she gave him an ultimatum, and Lucas didn't take it seriously, so he did it again. When Daniel tried to get Lucas to clean his mess, or leave their apartment, Lucas got physically violent with HIM, as well. By Lucas's own admission, when Suzanne handed him a restraining order, telling him to get out of the house, he tore it up, and went outside to smoke. Lucas is impulsive, it's one of his defining characteristics. He's also always had violent fantasies. Whether or not he acts on those fantasies is open to debate, but in one of the oldest videos, when he had just separated from Suzanne, he tells people how to cook down rolling tobacco into a slurry to poison someone. The fact that he has thoughts like this, and makes a video like this, combined with the anger that we've seen from Lucas, makes me unwilling to believe that he would throw a glass at a wall, rather than a person.
I've never believed the glass against the wall in the restaurant story.