Darrell Sheets filed a harassment complaint in January, and the Arizona records now put a reported $500,000 demand at the center of his final months. The file says the former Storage Wars star described a two-year pattern tied to his business, Show Me Your Junk, before he died in April at 67.
January complaint in Arizona
The January complaint matters because it is the first dated step in the paper trail. Sheets said he had dealt with impersonation for two years, including spoofed calls and a fake Facebook page, which turned the dispute from a private irritation into something police could document.
By Friday, July 10, the Arizona police file had been cited publicly, giving the allegations a firmer place in the record. That includes the reported $500,000 demand, a figure that stands out because it is specific enough to suggest a direct monetary dispute rather than a vague grievance.
Show Me Your Junk claims
Sheets tied the impersonation to Show Me Your Junk, his business, and the file says police later contacted a man linked to the claims. The man declined to share his location, which left investigators with a lead but not the kind of follow-up that would have resolved the matter quickly.
Darrell Sheets left a note citing Facebook bullying, police report says sits alongside the same pattern: a public figure describing online harassment, then leaving a paper trail that shows how those complaints moved into police hands.
Two years of spoofed calls and a fake Facebook page point to a sustained campaign rather than a single flare-up. For anyone following the business side of celebrity disputes, that kind of record can matter because it preserves the chronology, the alleged method, and the amount at issue before memory fades.
April closed the file
April ended the case in the practical sense that Sheets died at 67 and could no longer testify. After that, the case closed without charges, leaving the reported $500,000 demand and the impersonation claims in the file but outside a courtroom test.
The unanswered issue is simple and sharp: what evidence supported the reported $500,000 demand and the impersonation claims? The records say enough to show a complaint, a timeline, and a dead end; they do not show a resolution, and that is where the story stops.







