Brett Cummins
T.V. Weatheman Brett Cummins, 33, woke up Tuesday to discover that a man he'd been with the night before was dead beside him in a hot tub, naked and wearing a dog collar, police say. KARK 4 News

The news that a TV weatherman in Arkansas, Brett Cummins, was found sleeping in a hot tub next to a nude dead man reminded me that many others of his particular profession have run afoul with the law,

In Cummins case, police have discovered themes of sex and drugs in connection with the death of Dexter Williams (who was reportedly wearing a dog collar).

However, Cummins is certainly not the first TV meteorologist to get in serious criminal trouble.

Just last year, Heidi Jones, a winsome weather-woman on WABC station in New York was arrested after filing a false attempted sexual assault with the police. At first she claimed that a Hispanic male had attacked her while she was jogging in Central Park. She later recanted her story, and was fired by the station.

Bill Kamal, a popular weatherman in South Florida, was caught in an Internet sex sting – he was reportedly seeking to meet up with a 14-year-old boy. He was eventually sentenced to five years in prison. (He claimed he was framed).

Yet another South Florida weatherman, Michael Koolick, was arrested last year on drug charges – he had apparently forged a prescription for painkillers.

Earlier this year, a weatherman at KUSI-TV in San Diego, Joe Lizura, quit his job after pleading guilty to a misdemeanor charge of lewd behavior in public (i.e, he was masturbating in the window of an office building).

In 2009, Jay Patrick, a former weatherman at WJAC-TV in the Pittsburgh area, was caught in Kiev, Russia after being on the lam for four years. He was originally arrested in 2004 on charges that he sexually assaulted a young girl.

In December 2010, Rick Mecklenburg, a weatherman in South Bend, Ind., was picked up for making false claims to police – he had alleged that he called the cops complaining that a police squad car backed into his car and that someone was shooting at home.

In 2003, David Rogers, a former weatherman for KYW-TV in Philadelphia was arrested in Cleveland on charges he hit two road workers with his car and sped away. (He had been drinking).

In 2009, a Las Vegas weatherman named John Fredericks was arrested for stalking and harassing a woman he was obsessed with.

And these incidents are certainly not limited to the U.S. either.

In February of this year, a British weatherman for BBC named Desune Coleman was arrested for pointing an imitation gun at other motorists while driving down the highway.

In 2010 in Germany, a very popular weatherman named Jörg Kachelmann was arrested on charges that he raped his girlfriend at knifepoint. He was eventually acquitted. (He was reportedly seeing up to 14 different women simultaneously).