YFN LUCCI RICO CASE, BLOOD GANG TAKE DOWN - YouTube

Channel: unknown

[0]
While being a poppin' rapper obviously comes with its benefits,
[3]
if you’re not careful, it can also bring drama.
[5]
If you’re still livin' the life you talk about in your music
[7]
or even associating with people who are,
[9]
all that attention can lead to your downfall.
[12]
YFN Lucci is the most recent rapper to get caught up in a legal situation
[15]
for allegedly being the leader of a national blood gang.
[18]
Let’s take a closer look at this story.
[20]
YFN Lucci is a rapper and singer from Atlanta, Georgia.
[23]
He grew up in the Summerhill neighborhood
[25]
and started taking music seriously at age 16
[28]
after being encouraged by rapper Johnny Cinco.
[30]
But before the music, he was involved in the streets,
[33]
and growing up his mother’s house was shot up twice.
[36]
He released his debut mixtape Wish Me Well in 2014
[39]
and started building a buzz in his city.
[41]
He started gaining national attention after his single Key to the Streets
[44]
featuring Migos and Trouble
[46]
peaked at #70 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2016
[49]
and he followed up with a remix featuring Lil Wayne, 2 Chainz, and Quavo.
[53]
He released an EP called Long Live Nut;
[55]
a project dedicated to his friend Nut who helped Lucci get his first record deal
[59]
before getting killed early in the rapper’s career.
[61]
That EP contained the song Everyday We Lit
[64]
featuring PnB Rock
[65]
that became one of the artist's biggest hit’s to date
[67]
peaking at number 33 on the Billboard Hot 100.
[69]
Lucci seemed like he was on the path to fame and fortune,
[72]
until he was arrested in early 2021
[75]
and charged with a series of crimes that may put his career on hold for the next few years.
[79]
In January 2021,
[80]
the Atlanta police department issued a warrant for Lucci’s arrest,
[83]
claiming that he was the driver in a gang-related shootout
[86]
that left one person dead and another critically injured.
[89]
According to police, Lucci, along with two other alleged gang members
[93]
drove into opp territory in December 2020,
[95]
looking for drama.
[97]
When they saw their targets,
[98]
someone in the vehicle opened fire.
[100]
The targets fired back,
[101]
hitting one of the men in the car,
[103]
who was later identified as a 28-year-old man named James Adams.
[106]
James was thrown from the car and found by police dead on the side of the road.
[110]
Later that same day,
[111]
a 32-year-old man named Kevin Wright showed up at a local fire station
[115]
with a gunshot to the stomach and was treated for his injuries.
[118]
Police later arrested a 23-year-old man named Ray’von Boyd,
[121]
along with a 17-year-old named Leroy Pitts
[124]
for allegedly participating in the shooting.
[126]
Boyd is more commonly known as CP3,
[128]
a rapper from Liberty Square in Miami often called the Pork and Beans Projects.
[133]
Authorities allege that CP3 was the shooter
[135]
and Lucci was the driver in a gang hit that went wrong
[138]
and left one of their own people dead.
[139]
James Adams was allegedly shot in the head in the chaos
[143]
and pushed out of the car to die on the side of the road.
[145]
As a result, all three men in the car
[147]
– Lucci, CP3, and Leroy Pitts-
[150]
were charged with murder, aggravated assault,
[152]
participating in criminal street gang activity, among other charges.
[156]
Authorities claim that they purposefully drove into a rival gang territory
[160]
with the intention of committing acts of violence
[162]
and therefore are responsible for the death of their friend.
[165]
Lucci turned himself into police not long after the warrant was issued
[169]
and is currently fighting the case.
[170]
If convicted of the crime,
[172]
he potentially faces life in prison or the death penalty.
[175]
Then, in April, not long after being released on a $500,000 bond for the murder charge,
[180]
Lucci was arrested again after visiting a recording studio and strip club
[185]
that was somehow connected to the shooting.
[187]
It’s not clear what that connection is,
[189]
but authorities also claim that Lucci attempted to alter his court-ordered ankle monitor
[193]
to hide his location and failed a drug test.
[196]
They tried to revoke his bond as a punishment for these offenses.
[199]
If his bond is revoked,
[200]
he would have to stay in jail until the murder trial was over.
[203]
To make matters even worse,
[205]
in early May Lucci was hit with a Georgia RICO indictment
[208]
along with a dozen other alleged members of different sets of a national blood gang.
[212]
Despite admitting that Lucci is not an active member of the gang,
[215]
just an affiliate,
[216]
the authorities are trying to paint him as the ringleader of the organization,
[219]
who used his clout as a famous rapper to advance the crew’s agenda in the streets.
[223]
They are pointing to the December 2020 shooting as evidence
[226]
that Lucci is not just a rapper affiliated with the set,
[228]
he is an active participant in street activities.
[231]
The indictment targeted several blood gang sets from Atlanta to Miami.
[235]
Two sets from Atlanta – called ABG (or Atlanta Blood Gang)
[239]
and BG (or Bird Gang),
[241]
were named in the court paperwork.
[243]
These two sets are under the umbrella of the Inglewood Family Gangsta bloods,
[246]
a gang from Inglewood, California.
[248]
The Bloodhounds and 13th Ave Hot Boys
[250]
were two sets from Miami also targeted in the takedown
[253]
and are based in the Pork and Beans projects in Miami.
[256]
Lucci is alleged to have affiliations to the gangs in the Pork and Beans,
[259]
which is how he knows CP3.
[260]
Lucci is being accused of trying to unite the Miami and Atlanta blood sets
[264]
and push the agenda of the gang through music
[266]
and his own participation in street activities.
[268]
The prosecutors are using his music videos
[270]
and Instagram posts to paint Lucci as a violent gang leader.
[273]
They point to music videos and footage uploaded to the internet
[276]
of Lucci hanging out in the Pork and Beans projects, as evidence of his intentions.
[280]
They also point to an alleged incident where
[282]
Lucci nearly strangled a man to death for playing a rival gang member’s music,
[286]
then bribing him not to snitch.
[287]
They say that Lucci is not just an entertainer,
[290]
posting things to his social media to engage with fans,
[292]
but he is pushing a gang lifestyle
[294]
that is connected to his music and the violent culture around it.
[296]
They are using everything from red rags in music videos
[300]
to guns posted to Instagram
[301]
and tweets with photo captions referencing murder and other crimes as evidence
[305]
that Lucci, CP3 and everyone else involved in the case are violent criminals,
[310]
contributing to the advancement of a gang lifestyle.
[312]
So, Lucci is not just facing a murder charge that carries life,
[315]
he’s also facing a whole bunch of other charges related to the RICO indictment
[319]
that carry even more years.
[321]
Even though it’s definitely not looking great for Lucci at the moment,
[324]
he does have a few things going for him.
[325]
He isn’t being charged with a federal crime,
[327]
it’s a Georgia State Rico charge.
[329]
Usually when the Feds get involved it means you’re already ******,
[333]
because Federal cases have around a 90% conviction rate.
[336]
State cases are a little easier to beat,
[338]
but it means they can use more circumstantial evidence like social media posts.
[342]
State RICO cases also carry less time,
[345]
but the Georgia Rico Act
[346]
allows for a broader range of crimes to be considered racketeering,
[349]
so it may be tough for Lucci to beat every charge.
[352]
The other thing he has going for him
[353]
is that the prosecutors have acknowledged that he isn’t actually in a gang,
[356]
he’s just an affiliate.
[358]
It may be hard for them to charge him with a gang indictment
[360]
while admitting he isn’t actually an official member.
[362]
But the term gang can be pretty vague,
[364]
and prosecutors may try to argue that YFN itself is a set of the bloods.
[368]
They will have to show that the affiliation goes deeper than rap
[371]
but if they can prove Lucci is guilty of some of the violent crimes he’s accused of,
[375]
they may have a better case.
[376]
Another positive for Lucci
[378]
is that he isn’t suspected to be the shooter in his murder case.
[381]
The prosecutors will have to prove
[382]
that the crew drove into rival gang territory that night
[385]
intentionally looking for opps
[386]
and made the calculated decision to leave James Adams dead on the side of the road.
[390]
With a good lawyer,
[391]
he could argue that he just happened to be driving around with some people he knew,
[394]
and **** popped off that had nothing to do with him.
[396]
But the police allegedly recovered James’s cell phone
[399]
which had video footage they used to identify who was in the car.
[402]
What is on that cellphone could likely determine whether Lucci will walk
[405]
or face life in prison.
[406]
If the authorities want the case to stick,
[408]
they will have to have solid evidence
[410]
that Lucci committed violent crimes for the benefit of a gang.
[413]
The social media posts and other circumstantial evidence
[415]
may be able to tie him to the bloods
[417]
if they can prove he actually committed other crimes.
[419]
But without more solid evidence,
[421]
it may be hard for prosecutors to hit him with a RICO charge
[423]
just for wearing red rags and hanging out in the Pork and Beans.
[427]
His participation in the drive-by that led to the shooting of James Adams
[430]
is the biggest piece of evidence that authorities have
[432]
to prove Lucci was involved in gang activity.
[434]
Associating with other rappers who happen to be in a gang,
[437]
especially when it’s for the purpose of making music or social media content
[440]
isn’t a crime.
[441]
But being the getaway driver in a murder case is a bit more serious.
[445]
Racketeering charges can be hard for rappers to beat
[448]
because prosecutors don’t necessarily have to find you guilty of a crime –
[451]
they just have to prove that your actions
[453]
contributed to a culture of violence that led to the committing of a crime.
[456]
Many rappers over the past few years have been hit with federal racketeering charges,
[460]
from Bobby Shmurda to Cassanova to 6ix9ine.
[463]
If you look at the federal case against GS9,
[466]
Bobby Shmurda was never actually accused of actively participating
[470]
in any of the more serious crimes the gang allegedly committed.
[472]
But he still spent 7 years behind bars
[475]
because prosecutors claim that he was the face of the group
[477]
and responsible for orchestrating some of the violence.
[480]
Racketeering was a charge created to hold mafia bosses accountable for crimes
[483]
committed at their direction.
[485]
Before the RICO ACT was passed in 1970,
[487]
the courts had a hard time pinning crimes on the bosses at the top of the organization,
[491]
because they rarely were the ones committing the crimes themselves.
[494]
The RICO Act made it possible to charge members of a criminal organization
[497]
with crimes that they ordered or otherwise participated in.
[500]
In recent years, the RICO Act
[502]
has been used to target different types of criminal organizations,
[505]
including street gangs, especially those associated with famous rappers.
[508]
Lucci is facing a state RICO case
[510]
and not a Federal Case, but the idea is still the same.
[513]
Under the Georgia Rico Law,
[515]
it’s a crime for any person through a pattern of racketeering activity
[518]
to acquire or maintain interest in or any type of property or business.
[522]
Racketeering activity includes crimes such as drug offenses, homicide, bodily injury,
[528]
arson, burglary, and so on.
[530]
So, even though Lucci isn’t alleged to be a member of the gang,
[533]
prosecutors can argue that he profited from the promotion of gang activity
[537]
and therefore can be found guilty of racketeering.
[540]
A conviction under the Georgia RICO Act carries a penalty of 5 to 20 years in prison
[544]
and/or a fine of up to three times the amount of money gained by the defendant
[548]
as a result of the alleged racketeering.
[550]
Lucci has a chance of beating the racketeering charge if he has a good lawyer,
[554]
but he’ll have to beat the murder charge first.
[556]
He’s most likely looking at doing some time in prison given all the charges he’s facing;
[560]
the question is whether he’ll be going away for life
[563]
or be able to get out in time to continue his rap career.
[565]
If he can beat the murder charge or plead it down to a lesser offense,
[568]
it will be easier to poke holes in the racketeering case.
[571]
But if he’s convicted of participating in a gang-related drive-by shooting
[574]
that left one person dead and another critically injured,
[577]
the RICO case will only make his sentence worse.
[580]
This is a big case,
[581]
not only for Lucci, but for hip hop in general.
[584]
If police can successfully tie a rapper to a gang,
[587]
purely based on music videos and social media posts,
[590]
many artists are going to have to rethink how they brand themselves in the future.
[593]
This isn’t the first time that prosecutors have used lyrics and social media
[596]
as evidence in a case,
[597]
but the amount of detail they are putting into their analysis of Lucci’s internet profile
[601]
is a new record –
[602]
sighting specific music videos, IG captions,
[605]
and more to paint Lucci as a powerful drug lord
[607]
who used his gang ties to orchestrate a wave of terror from Miami to Atlanta.
[611]
Using that logic, nearly any rapper could be painted as El Chapo,
[615]
simply because they portray themselves as a powerful drug lord in their music –
[618]
which is obviously not the case.
[620]
Lucci’s lawyer, Drew Findling said that
[623]
“to sit and analyze somebody’s social media account
[625]
and try to somehow find evidence of a crime is ridiculous
[628]
when people are just really expressing themselves through social media”.
[631]
The bright side is that if the prosecutors are basing their case so heavily on internet speculation,
[636]
they may not have much solid evidence to prove his gang affiliations.
[639]
In that case, Lucci’s lawyer could use the first amendment to claim that the rapper
[643]
was just expressing himself artistically and wasn’t involved in any criminal activity.
[647]
Lucci will likely be fighting this case for a while
[649]
and more information will come to light as the trial continues.
[652]
It all comes down to how much evidence the prosecutors have
[654]
to link him to actual crimes and gang activity.
[657]
Even though the rapper is facing some serious time,
[659]
there are many holes in the case that can be exposed by a good team of lawyers.
[663]
If you liked this video check out some of our previous videos!
[666]
From rappers pardoned of their crimes
[667]
to rappers getting ran up on,
[669]
we cover the most insane stories that you need to hear!
[671]
Well, that's all for today!
[673]
If you enjoyed this video, go ahead and give us a thumbs up
[676]
and let us know in the comments what you'd like to see in the future.
[678]
Don't forget to subscribe to our channel
[680]
and hit that notification button, so you never miss any great content like this.
[683]
Catch you in the next video!