The University of Georgia (UGA) student who went viral for her smiling mugshot earlier this month has been arrested again.
Lily Stewart was arrested on charges of obstruction of a law enforcement officer and loitering/prowling on Sunday, March 23, according to Athens-Clarke County online records. TMZ was the first to report the news.
Per the county’s website, Stewart, 20, was initially booked at 5:26 a.m. local time after being arrested by the UGA Police Department.
She has since posted a total bond of $4,000 and was released from police custody shortly before 11 a.m.
Stewart first went viral earlier this month, after her March 8 mugshot was seen by millions across the internet. At the time, she was arrested on suspicion of speeding in excess of the maximum limits.
Before her arrest, Stewart was on her way to a party in Milledgeville, Ga. that a fraternity was throwing at Georgia College & State University.
She told PEOPLE days later that she was “hitting 85 [mph] in the 55” zone, before a Georgia State Patrol car issued her a speeding ticket. She was then pulled over for going the same speed only moments later.
Stewart was subsequently taken to jail and paid a $440 bond at the time.
The woman’s mugshot — which shows her smiling with a blowout and pearl earrings — later circulated online. As Stewart explained to PEOPLE, she gained thousands of new social media followers and plenty of internet comments as a result.
“I look like a basic white girl, and I am,” she said, adding, “I think it’s hilarious. One of them was like, ‘We know she has a monogram rain jacket’ — which I do.”
“There are some beautiful mug shots. I don’t think mine’s particularly stunning,” Stewart added. “I actually think it’s a bad photo of me. If you see me in person, I don’t really look the same as I do in that mug shot. I don’t think it’s a great photo of me.”
Following Stewart’s arrest earlier this month, Morgan County Sheriff Tyler Hooks explained that the student “could have hurt herself or someone else,” and he added that he hopes she learned a “lesson.”
As for her past speeding issue, Stewart said her attorney “got it taken care of,” and she is now taking a defensive driving course, completing 20 hours of community service and writing a paper about the dangers of speeding.