Police called to Chris Brown's home

Police were called to singer Chris Brown's Los Angeles home early Tuesday for a disturbance.

Officers responded to a woman's call for help at Brown's suburban residence, an LAPD spokesman said. LAPD's Robbery-Homicide division is handling the incident.

Officers obtained a search warrant Tuesday afternoon. No arrests have been made, according to Lt. Chris Ramirez with the LAPD. Brown is at his residence with his attorney Mark Geragos, police told CNN.

A large police presence could be seen outside Brown's home on aerial footage from CNN affiliates Tuesday.

Brown, 27, posted three videos to his social media accounts earlier Tuesday. In one video, the singer railed against the police and media and said he was being unfairly portrayed as a villain.

"Good luck. When you get the warrant or whatever you need to do, you're going to walk right up in here and you're going to see nothing, you idiots," he said in one video. "I'm tired of ... dealing with y'all."

"At the same time," Brown added, "when I call the police for stalker people that are endangering my life, they don't come until the next day. Then somebody make a f***ed up allegation about me, and oh yeah the whole f***ing SWAT team."

Brown was put on probation for five years in 2009 after pleading guilty to one count of felony assault over an attack on then girlfriend Rihanna. He was jailed for almost three months in 2014 after violating his probation.

Brown's representatives did not immediately respond to CNN's request for comment on this story.