Sum 41 star Deryck Whibley has claimed he did cocaine with Paris Hilton during a steamy brief fling in the early 2000s.
The In Too Deep hitmaker, now 44, who accused his former manager of sexual abuse in new memoir Walking Disaster, had a six month tryst with Hilton, 43 in 2003 – and has sensationally claimed she kept ‘blow’ in her purse with the pair allegedly high on cocaine during a topless makeout session.
In an excerpt from the tome obtained by DailyMail.com Whibley details the start of their romance at an LA club writing: ‘As soon as we walked in, I made eye contact with a beautiful blond girl who I recognized but couldn’t place. Dailymail.com has reached out to representatives for Hilton and have yet to hear back.
‘She clearly recognized me, too, as she came straight over. “Hi! Remember me? We met a couple years ago at the MTV thing you played.” I realized that it was Paris Hilton. She wasn’t a household name yet, but she was still Paris Hilton and I definitely remembered her.
“How could I forget you?” I said with a smile. “You were so cold and rude to me.” Her eyes widened and with an embarrassed laugh she said, “No I wasn’t!

Sum 41 star Deryck Whibley has claimed he did cocaine with Paris Hilton during a steamy brief fling in the early 2000s – pictured 2003

The In Too Deep hitmaker, now 44, had a six month tryst with Hilton, 43 in 2003 – and has sensationally claimed she kept ‘blow’ in her purse with the pair allegedly high on cocaine during a topless makeout session
‘Was I? What did I say?” I laughed and said, “You looked at me and said in a stuck-up pretentious voice, ‘So . . . what cool band are you?’ ”
‘Luckily she had a good sense of humor… we laughed it off and she invited me to her table.’
He recalled how the pair ‘talked and did shots’ at her star-studded table before they began ‘making out.’
Lauding the ‘cool, sweet, clearly wild’ star Whibley revealed the pair ended up a ‘weird old mansion in the Hollywood Hills’ which ‘belonged to an old out-of-work movie producer from the seventies.
He writes: ‘We were greeted at the front door by a barely twentysomething girl wearing lingerie and seemingly stoned on heroin.
‘Paris pulled out a bit of coke… I did one bump, which turned out to be the purest, most amazing blow I’d ever had in my entire life. It wasn’t edgy, it wasn’t speedy, I didn’t feel my heart racing at all. I just felt f*****g incredible.;
At 3am and with a show the next day, the pair left the party – with Whibley recounting their steamy encounter on top of a vintage car.
He writes: ‘We kept making out as I left the party, and soon we found ourselves living out some eighties dream, high on coke and making out on the hood of the movie producer’s vintage Porsche.

He writes: ‘Paris pulled out a bit of coke… I did one bump, which turned out to be the purest, most amazing blow I’d ever had in my entire life. It wasn’t edgy, it wasn’t speedy, I didn’t feel my heart racing at all. I just felt f*****g incredible’ – pictured 2003

He wrote of their steamy night: ‘Her top came off and it was getting intense. The only thing that wasn’t part of the dream was the guys from the band at the end of the driveway yelling at me because I was taking so long’ – pictured 2003

Whibley says he was so high on drugs he ended up missing the band’s first Canadian show due to being in an alleged ‘Xanax coma’ with Paris – Whibley is pictured with bandmates Steve Jocz, Jason McCaslin and Dave Baksh in 2003
‘Her top came off and it was getting intense. The only thing that wasn’t part of the dream was the guys from the band at the end of the driveway yelling at me because I was taking so long.’
The pair’s alleged wild escapades continued as Whibley claimed the pair ‘did lines of blow’ at a house party the night before his first tour show in Canada – before faking an orgy when police abruptly showed up.
He writes: ‘I had one week off before our Canadian tour and I spent it in Los Angeles with Paris. I was starting to get cocky and had booked my flight to Toronto at 6 a.m. on the day of the first show.
‘The night before my flight, Paris’s friend was having a big house party up in the Hills.
‘Soon enough Paris and I found ourselves in a back bedroom of a Hollywood Hills mansion with my friend Byron from the band Pennywise and some guy I didn’t know.
‘We were sitting around a small round table doing lines of blow and talking at each other. I started chatting up the stranger, and while he was pretty f****d up and slurring, I gathered that his band had just been signed to a major label and he was excited about their new music.
‘Then it f*****g hit me: He was Scott Weiland from Stone Temple Pilots, and he was talking about his new supergroup, Velvet Revolver, with him and members of Guns N’ Roses.’
Weiland died aged 48 in 2015 as the the result of an accidental overdose of cocaine, alcohol, and methylenedioxyamphetamine (MDA).

In his memoir Whibley has accused his former manager Greig Nori of sexual abusing him in his explosive new memoir

Whibley alleges Nori, now 62, (pictured 2012) and the frontman of Canadian punk band Treble Charger, groomed, manipulated and sexually abused him, starting when he was just 18 and Nori 36.
Whibley continues: ‘Right as I was putting these pieces together, someone burst through the door, yelling, “The cops are here busting people for drugs!” I f*****g panicked, jumping up to flush the drugs or hide or something, while Paris calmly cleared the mountain of coke into her bag.
‘I continued freaking out because now Paris had a ton of blow in her purse, there was no way out of this back room, and the cops were about to bust in. Also, we were super f*****g high.
‘That’s when I came up with what I thought was a brilliant plan. “All four of us should jump in the bed, get under the covers, and pretend like we’re having an orgy, so when the cops come in they’ll think we’re gross sex freaks and leave us alone!” I said.
‘Everyone (they were also high) thought it was a perfect plan. We jumped in bed and Scott started rubbing my chest and undoing his pants. I shouted, “Whoa whoa whoa what the f**k are you doing?”
‘He replied in a really stoned voice, “What? I thought you said we were having an orgy.” I shouted back, “PRETEND! I said pretend we were having an orgy!”
‘After about fifteen minutes of our pretend orgy, we heard music playing and people talking. Someone had just panicked when the cops showed up for a noise complaint, and we were safe.’
Whibley says he was so high on drugs he ended up missing the band’s first Canadian show due to being in an alleged ‘Xanax coma’ with Paris.
He wrote: ‘No one knew I wasn’t going to make the show and no one believed I would f**k up so badly as to miss it entirely. The amphitheater was sold out, the fans were packed in, the opening band played, and then it was time for Sum 41 to go on.
The whole band was waiting at the side of the stage, guitars on and ready to go. They were convinced it was some elaborate prank, that I was going to surprise them at the last second, say “HAHA! GOTCHA!” and play the set for the sold-out crowd. Nope. I wasn’t even in the country.

Whibley – pictured with Nori (left) in 2005 – claims the manager grabbed his face and ‘passionately’ kissed him at a rave – seen with Ludacris and Steve Jocz
‘I was conked out in a Xanax coma next to Paris Hilton in some random person’s house in the Hollywood Hills after partying with rock stars all night.
‘When it became clear that this wasn’t an elaborate prank and I really wasn’t showing up, the venue announced that the show was canceled.
‘Understandably, the crowd started booing and throwing whatever they had at the stage. The next day, the front page of the local newspaper was emblazoned with the headline: “BOO! SUM NO SHOW!”
In 2010 Paris pleaded guilty to two misdemeanor offences – drug possession and obstructing a public officer – after she was caught with cocaine in her handbag.
Hilton initially denied the cocaine was hers, claiming the handbag it was in belonged to somebody else.
But as part of a plea deal Hilton accepted responsibility in return for no jail sentence.
Whibley has spoken openly about his battle with alcohol addiction which started after the 2001 release of the band’s album, All Killer, No Filler. He constantly toured for more than a decade and drank heavily to cope.
DailyMail.com has contacted representatives for Paris Hilton for comment.
This comes after Whibley accused his former manager Greig Nori of sexual abusing him in his explosive new memoir.
Whibley alleges Nori, now 62, and the frontman of Canadian punk band Treble Charger, groomed, manipulated and sexually abused him, starting when he was just 18 and Nori 36.
Whibley began working with Nori – the band’s first music manager when he was 16 in the late 1990s – and claims in new memoir Walking Disaster: My Life Through Heaven and Hell, that Nori encouraged him to take drugs before abusing him for the first time in a restroom at a rave.
In excerpts obtained by the Los Angeles Times Whibley writes: ‘Greig had one requirement to be our manager — he wanted total control. We couldn’t talk to anyone but him, because the music business is ‘full of snakes and liars’ and he was the only person we could trust.
The musician alleges when he was aged 18 and ‘intoxicated at a rave’ Nori asked him to ‘come to the bathroom to drop another hit of ecstasy.’
He claims Nori then grabbed his face and ‘passionately’ kissed him – with Whibley walking away ‘stunned.’
He writes that he had ‘never’ thought of Nori like that and claims Nori told him while he had ‘never experienced same-sex attraction before, [Whibley] brought it out in him because what [they] had was so special.’
‘He was so relentless and convincing that after a while, I started to believe that maybe he was right’ Whibley writes.
Whibley’s book claims as weeks went by, Nori allegedly tried to convince him to explore their connection because ‘so many of my rock star idols were queer. … Most people are bisexual; they’re just too afraid to admit it.’
As Sum 41’s popularity grew they traveled more and more – with Whibley feeling ‘relieved’ at the distance between him and Nori.
When he returned home to Ajax, Ontario Whibley also claims he attempted to end his physical relationship with Nori as he was not gay or bisexual.
In the book Whibley claims Nori called him ‘homophobic’ in response and listed reasons Whibley ‘owed him’ for his music career.
He writes: ‘He told me this was all my fault to begin with because I should never have said yes to it in the first place. I started this and now he was in it with me so I couldn’t just stop.’
He claims in the book that Nori finally stopped initiating sexual encounters with him when a mutual friend learned what had happened – with the unnamed friend telling Whibley and Nori their relationship was abuse.
Whibley writes that after their sexual relationship ended, Nori began abusing him verbally and psychologically.
He claimed that Nori would alternately praise him or berate him and turn the rest of the band against him by claiming he had ‘gone Hollywood’ due to his romance with Lavigne.
The In Too Deep hitmaker said he never told anyone – not even his bandmates – about the alleged sexual abuse, but did tell ex Avril Lavigne during their four year marriage from 2006-2010.
He writes in the memoir that Lavigne exclaimed when told of the alleged abuse: ‘That’s abuse! He sexually abused you’ with his current wife Ariana Cooper responding in the same way.
Whibley claims Nori – who also produced some of the band’s songs – would insist on a songwriter credit on ‘most of’ their tracks – claiming the music industry would ‘take them more seriously’ if his name was down as a co-writer.
In 2018 Whibley sued Nori over allegedly taking some of his most lucrative songwriting credits – with Whibley winning back the songwriting share of the band’s publishing credits.

The In Too Deep hitmaker said he never told anyone – not even his bandmates – about the alleged sexual abuse, but did tell ex Avril Lavigne during their four year marriage from 2006-2010 – pictured 2007

He says he was inspired to reveal the alleged abuse after his wife Ariana detailed a past suicide attempt in a joint 2021 interview – saying ‘I felt the importance to just be open’
Whibley writes that he tried to get his bandmates to fire Nori, citing time management issues, and allegedly showing up to a band show high on ecstasy – but the band refused.
Nori was fired in 2005 after album Chuck was released
Nori has not responded to repeated requests for comment from the publication.
Whibley told Rolling Stone about his decision to reveal the alleged abuse for the first time: ‘I always thought that I would take this to my grave and I wouldn’t say anything. As I started getting into the book, I felt like, ‘How could I not be honest?’”
‘I went through a long period of my time where I didn’t think about it anymore. I came to realize it was self-defense. I came to realize later on that I didn’t want to think about it or have any feelings of being a victim. I didn’t want to have victim issues.
To this day Whibley does not call the alleged incidents ‘abuse’ in his memoir and said he’s still in the ‘early stages’ of processing it.

Last year Sum 41 announced they would be disbanding after a final headlining tour and eight and final studio album

The band thanked fans when announcing their plan to break up
‘I’m dealing with it for the first time and I don’t know what I think about it. I can’t deny that it was very manipulative, but I didn’t really realize what a lot of this was. It didn’t dawn on me until I hit the age he was, in his mid-30s, when I was a teenager. He was a hero so to see that power dynamic, you see how you can manipulate a 16-year-old kid.’
He says he was inspired to reveal the alleged abuse after Ariana – with whom ge shares two children – detailed a past suicide attempt in a joint 2021 interview – saying ‘I felt the importance to just be open.’
Whibley sent the memoir – set for release on Tuesday – to his bandmates, saying: ‘He became kind of a bad guy to all of us. We all collectively never spoke about him.’
Last year Sum 41 announced they would be breaking up as a band after releasing one last studio album and tour.
‘Being in Sum 41 since 1996 brought us some of the best moments in our lives. We are forever grateful to our fans both old and new, who have supported us in any way. It is hard to articulate the love and respect we have for all of you and we wanted you to hear this from us first,’ a statement read on their Instagram page in May.
‘Sum 41 will be disbanding. We will still be finishing all of our current upcoming tour dates this year, and we’re looking forward to releasing our final album Heaven :x: Hell, along with a final worldwide headlining tour to celebrate, Details will be announced as soon as we have them.’
The band, which also includes Dave Baksh, Jason McCaslin, Tom Thacker and Frank Zummo ended the statement by writing how they’re ‘excited for what the future will bring for each of us. Thank you for the last 27 years of Sum 41.’
Sum 41’s final show is scheduled for November. 23, 2024, in Nanterre, France
Since forming in 1996, Sum 41 has released eight studio albums, with their final album Heaven :x: Hell released in March 2024.