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SYDNEY (AP) — A New Zealand judge sentenced AC/DC drummer Phil Rudd to eight months of home detention today after the musician pleaded guilty to threatening to kill a man who used to work for him, along with possession of methamphetamine and marijuana.

The 61-year-old Australian born drummer had faced up to seven years in prison on the threatening to kill charge, but his lawyer had argued for the conviction to be set aside.

During the hearing, Tauranga District Court Judge Thomas Ingram said Rudd had a limited criminal history and posed a low risk of reoffending, Radio New Zealand reported. But Ingram said Rudd had been found with a substantial amount of drugs. And the judge rejected an argument from Rudd’s lawyer that the death threat boiled down to one angry phone call.

Rudd has been out on bail since pleading guilty to the charges in April, when he acknowledged in a court summary of facts that he’d offered large amounts of cash, vehicles and a house to an associate after asking him to have the victim “taken out.” He also acknowledged that he’d directly said to the victim he was going to kill him.

Prosecutors had also originally charged Rudd with murder-for-hire, but later dropped it, citing lack of evidence.

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Rudd did not comment on the sentence as he left the courthouse, simply telling reporters to “get a (expletive) job” and batting away a microphone as he got into a waiting car.

Rudd’s lawyer, Craig Tuck, later said in an email that an appeal had been filed.

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