Metro

Underage drinking charge to be dismissed against Scout Willis

There is good news in a Manhattan court this morning for the 21-year-old daughter of Demi Moore and Bruce Willis — her misdemeanor drinking-in-public case will be dismissed providing she serves two days community service and keeps her nose clean for six months.

The no-jail, no-probation, no-criminal-record deal — common for first offenders facing non-violent misdemeanors — was worked out with prosecutors in the weeks since cops busted Scout Willis for allegedly chugging an eight-ounce can of Pakistani beer in the Union Square subway station.

Willis was still 20 at the time, and made matters worse for herself by allegedly giving cops a false ID in the name of “Katherine Kelly” before ‘fessing up to being an underage celebrity daughter.

The initial identification difficulties resulted in the blonde, budding musician spending the night in custody.

Defense lawyer Stacey Richman had filed papers three weeks ago asking that the charges be dismissed immediately because the only brewery in Pakistan doesn’t make an eight-ounce beer.

But Richman had also argued that, given Willis’ clean record and excellent standing as a student at Brown University, the proper disposition was for the case to be dismissed.

“Ms. Willis is an excellent student at Brown University; she is involved in a multitude of extracurricular activities and is, while maintaining her excellent scholastic standing, pursuing her music career interests and performing internationally,” Richman wrote.

“It seems entirely illogical for the country to saddle this young woman, no different from any of us at that age, with any aspect of a criminal record.”

Willis did not need to attend court today; she has until Oct. 2 to serve her community service.

“The (DA’s office) took a logical approach in assessing the situation and even without the papers this should have been the disposition,” Richman said after the brief proceeding.