Prominent South Florida chef Louie Bossi, the namesake of restaurants in Fort Lauderdale and Boca Raton, has entered a pre-trial intervention agreement for first-time offenders following his arrest on a misdemeanor domestic battery charge last month, court records show.
If Bossi successfully meets the requirements of the program, the State Attorney’s Office will not pursue the charge presented against him, according to the agreement signed Feb. 2.
On Jan. 12, Bossi’s wife called police after an argument with Bossi, 58, in which she said her husband pushed her and threatened her at their Palm Beach County home, according to a probable cause affidavit for his arrest.
While on the phone with a 911 dispatcher, Bossi’s wife said he was shouting: “I’m going to kill you,” according to the affidavit. A Palm Beach County Sheriff’s deputy who responded to the call wrote in the affidavit that Bossi’s wife had bruising and scratches on her right wrist.
Bossi told the deputy the argument was over his wife’s medication and that she had “aggressively approached him so he put his hands on her shoulders” to prevent her from getting to him, according to the affidavit.
As part of the program, Bossi is required within 60 days to complete an eight-hour anger management course and have no violent contact with his wife, according to the court document. His wife must also complete a three-hour domestic violence educational course.
A court date is scheduled for April.
Bossi’s defense attorney did not immediately return a message seeking comment left at his office Friday afternoon.
Louie Bossi’s Ristorante opened in Fort Lauderdale on Las Olas Boulevard in 2015 and later added a second location in Boca Raton, which reopened in November after being forced to close in April 2025 due to a kitchen fire.