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R.D.;7644779 said:Who the hell called his snitching ass for an opinion ?
loch121;7636485 said:I find it hard to believe that Schmurda is the leader of a natl organization.
I don't get the no bail thing.
Sounds like he's the scapegoat.
Elzo69Renaissance;7637004 said:Stiff;7636991 said:Elzo69Renaissance;7636967 said:Meh ....if TI taught us one thing is this is light work ...Bobby can actually beat the case tho
Idk bro...if they say they've been probing his whole clique for 2 years..that means they didn't pull the trigger on the arrest until they KNEW they had all they needed for a closed case.
And NY ain't playing about guns like GA is. There's actually a town not too far from Atlanta down here where it's illegal to be a homeowner and NOT own a gun. NY on the other hand...
It all depends on the evidence they collected so we ll have to wait and see....prolly surveillance and wiretapping tho...the guns they caught him with could be anybody s If u get my drift
loch121;7637700 said:AggyAF;7637411 said:http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20141218/civic-center/bobby-shmurdas-gs9-crew-charged-24-shootings-1-murder-investigators
They were involved in 24 shootings since 2013, including the shooting death of a rival 19-year-old gang member in an East Flatbush bodega on Feb. 8, 2013, and a June shooting this year where Shmurda fired into a crowd outside a Clarkson Avenue barbershop, investigators said.
“These are bad people,” Police Commissioner Bill Bratton said during a press conference at police headquarters. “They shouldn’t be celebrated and the fact their music is celebrated, and the so-called dance that they created, I would hope that those that emulate it would effectively understand what the source of it is.”
Police seized 21 weapons, 10 of which they found after arresting Shmurda and seven other crew members at the Quad Recording Studios near Rockefeller Center early Wednesday morning.
Shmurda, whose real name is Ackquille Pollard, was stopped in a vehicle after leaving the studio, where police found two weapons and a small quantity of crack in the car, according to investigators.
In one bizarre incident this past July, Rowdy Rebel, whose real name is Chad Marshall, was driving with crew member Santino Boderick in Boerum Hill when they spotted a rival gang member.
Boderick jumped out the car and fired shots into the rival gang member’s car, missing him, but shattering the window, narcotics prosecutor Bridget Brennan said during the press conference.
Rebel then performed at the Barclays center “hours after that shooting” at a celebrity basketball tournament wearing the same clothes form the shooting, Brennan added.
About a month later, a gun was found under a bed in a room registered to Rebel at the Millennium Hotel in Manhattan. Balistic tests matched it to the July 27 shooting, Brennan said.
Shmurda’s lawyer said he was targeted because the “government hates rap and by extension hates rappers.”
“If his name was Joe Blow, they’d have given him a desk-appearance ticket or cut him loose from the precinct,” said lawyer Howard Greenberg before the arraignment.
Shmurda was charged with conspiracy, reckless endangerment, criminal possession of a weapon and criminally using drug paraphernalia.
He was held on $2 million bond, which Greenberg said his record label, Epic Records, will pay.
Shmurda’s mother, Leslie Pollard, said after the arraignment, “It’s in God’s hands now."
Rebel was charged with conspiracy, attempted murder, attempted assault, reckless endangerment and criminal possession of a weapon.
Rashid "Rasha" Derissant, 22, was charged with murdering a member of the rival BMW crew in the 2013 shooting. Alex "A-Rod" Crandon, 22, who allegedly accompanied Derissant to the bodega at 803 Clarkson Avenue, was also charged with murder.
The other men charged were Santino “Cueno” Boderick, 21, Brian “Meeshie” Harvey, 23, Nicolas “Montana Flea” McCoy, 20, Javase “Fame” Pollard 22, Deshain “D-Boy” Cockett, 23, Remy “Fetti” Marshall, 19, Devon “Slice” Rodney, 21, Delroy “D-Rose” Edwards and Clevon “Dread” Pearson, 23.
Shmurda is due back in court on Jan. 29.
Bratton also expressed frustration at record labels for looking to make money off music glorifying violence and more broadly at society for embracing it.
“We are celebrating this, we are paying for this, we are glamorizing it,” Bratton said. “Shame on [record labels], shame on us for allowing it to happen.”
A man who identified himself as a representative from Epic Records at court declined to comment.
What year is this really.Niggas ain't even really selling crack like that.
What's really goin on?
![]()
Trillaaaaaa;7638389 said:Wow yall are on here really slurping the police
I luh yuhs massa
IAmDopeSmoke;7645178 said:loch121;7637700 said:AggyAF;7637411 said:http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20141218/civic-center/bobby-shmurdas-gs9-crew-charged-24-shootings-1-murder-investigators
They were involved in 24 shootings since 2013, including the shooting death of a rival 19-year-old gang member in an East Flatbush bodega on Feb. 8, 2013, and a June shooting this year where Shmurda fired into a crowd outside a Clarkson Avenue barbershop, investigators said.
“These are bad people,” Police Commissioner Bill Bratton said during a press conference at police headquarters. “They shouldn’t be celebrated and the fact their music is celebrated, and the so-called dance that they created, I would hope that those that emulate it would effectively understand what the source of it is.”
Police seized 21 weapons, 10 of which they found after arresting Shmurda and seven other crew members at the Quad Recording Studios near Rockefeller Center early Wednesday morning.
Shmurda, whose real name is Ackquille Pollard, was stopped in a vehicle after leaving the studio, where police found two weapons and a small quantity of crack in the car, according to investigators.
In one bizarre incident this past July, Rowdy Rebel, whose real name is Chad Marshall, was driving with crew member Santino Boderick in Boerum Hill when they spotted a rival gang member.
Boderick jumped out the car and fired shots into the rival gang member’s car, missing him, but shattering the window, narcotics prosecutor Bridget Brennan said during the press conference.
Rebel then performed at the Barclays center “hours after that shooting” at a celebrity basketball tournament wearing the same clothes form the shooting, Brennan added.
About a month later, a gun was found under a bed in a room registered to Rebel at the Millennium Hotel in Manhattan. Balistic tests matched it to the July 27 shooting, Brennan said.
Shmurda’s lawyer said he was targeted because the “government hates rap and by extension hates rappers.”
“If his name was Joe Blow, they’d have given him a desk-appearance ticket or cut him loose from the precinct,” said lawyer Howard Greenberg before the arraignment.
Shmurda was charged with conspiracy, reckless endangerment, criminal possession of a weapon and criminally using drug paraphernalia.
He was held on $2 million bond, which Greenberg said his record label, Epic Records, will pay.
Shmurda’s mother, Leslie Pollard, said after the arraignment, “It’s in God’s hands now."
Rebel was charged with conspiracy, attempted murder, attempted assault, reckless endangerment and criminal possession of a weapon.
Rashid "Rasha" Derissant, 22, was charged with murdering a member of the rival BMW crew in the 2013 shooting. Alex "A-Rod" Crandon, 22, who allegedly accompanied Derissant to the bodega at 803 Clarkson Avenue, was also charged with murder.
The other men charged were Santino “Cueno” Boderick, 21, Brian “Meeshie” Harvey, 23, Nicolas “Montana Flea” McCoy, 20, Javase “Fame” Pollard 22, Deshain “D-Boy” Cockett, 23, Remy “Fetti” Marshall, 19, Devon “Slice” Rodney, 21, Delroy “D-Rose” Edwards and Clevon “Dread” Pearson, 23.
Shmurda is due back in court on Jan. 29.
Bratton also expressed frustration at record labels for looking to make money off music glorifying violence and more broadly at society for embracing it.
“We are celebrating this, we are paying for this, we are glamorizing it,” Bratton said. “Shame on [record labels], shame on us for allowing it to happen.”
A man who identified himself as a representative from Epic Records at court declined to comment.
What year is this really.Niggas ain't even really selling crack like that.
What's really goin on?
![]()
U'd be surprised how many folks still do crack bru. Shit might not be as big as before but folks still doing it and a rock goes for $100 so u sell 20 rocks in one day u still eating
SixGwad;7645203 said:The leader of gs9 got killed awhile back . His name was shyste
They're smoking Tina a.k.a Meth.Pico;7645279 said:Wait a minute?! Crack rock is $100?!?! How TF these crack buns be gettin high then?!?
Pico;7645279 said:IAmDopeSmoke;7645178 said:loch121;7637700 said:AggyAF;7637411 said:http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20141218/civic-center/bobby-shmurdas-gs9-crew-charged-24-shootings-1-murder-investigators
They were involved in 24 shootings since 2013, including the shooting death of a rival 19-year-old gang member in an East Flatbush bodega on Feb. 8, 2013, and a June shooting this year where Shmurda fired into a crowd outside a Clarkson Avenue barbershop, investigators said.
“These are bad people,” Police Commissioner Bill Bratton said during a press conference at police headquarters. “They shouldn’t be celebrated and the fact their music is celebrated, and the so-called dance that they created, I would hope that those that emulate it would effectively understand what the source of it is.”
Police seized 21 weapons, 10 of which they found after arresting Shmurda and seven other crew members at the Quad Recording Studios near Rockefeller Center early Wednesday morning.
Shmurda, whose real name is Ackquille Pollard, was stopped in a vehicle after leaving the studio, where police found two weapons and a small quantity of crack in the car, according to investigators.
In one bizarre incident this past July, Rowdy Rebel, whose real name is Chad Marshall, was driving with crew member Santino Boderick in Boerum Hill when they spotted a rival gang member.
Boderick jumped out the car and fired shots into the rival gang member’s car, missing him, but shattering the window, narcotics prosecutor Bridget Brennan said during the press conference.
Rebel then performed at the Barclays center “hours after that shooting” at a celebrity basketball tournament wearing the same clothes form the shooting, Brennan added.
About a month later, a gun was found under a bed in a room registered to Rebel at the Millennium Hotel in Manhattan. Balistic tests matched it to the July 27 shooting, Brennan said.
Shmurda’s lawyer said he was targeted because the “government hates rap and by extension hates rappers.”
“If his name was Joe Blow, they’d have given him a desk-appearance ticket or cut him loose from the precinct,” said lawyer Howard Greenberg before the arraignment.
Shmurda was charged with conspiracy, reckless endangerment, criminal possession of a weapon and criminally using drug paraphernalia.
He was held on $2 million bond, which Greenberg said his record label, Epic Records, will pay.
Shmurda’s mother, Leslie Pollard, said after the arraignment, “It’s in God’s hands now."
Rebel was charged with conspiracy, attempted murder, attempted assault, reckless endangerment and criminal possession of a weapon.
Rashid "Rasha" Derissant, 22, was charged with murdering a member of the rival BMW crew in the 2013 shooting. Alex "A-Rod" Crandon, 22, who allegedly accompanied Derissant to the bodega at 803 Clarkson Avenue, was also charged with murder.
The other men charged were Santino “Cueno” Boderick, 21, Brian “Meeshie” Harvey, 23, Nicolas “Montana Flea” McCoy, 20, Javase “Fame” Pollard 22, Deshain “D-Boy” Cockett, 23, Remy “Fetti” Marshall, 19, Devon “Slice” Rodney, 21, Delroy “D-Rose” Edwards and Clevon “Dread” Pearson, 23.
Shmurda is due back in court on Jan. 29.
Bratton also expressed frustration at record labels for looking to make money off music glorifying violence and more broadly at society for embracing it.
“We are celebrating this, we are paying for this, we are glamorizing it,” Bratton said. “Shame on [record labels], shame on us for allowing it to happen.”
A man who identified himself as a representative from Epic Records at court declined to comment.
What year is this really.Niggas ain't even really selling crack like that.
What's really goin on?
![]()
U'd be surprised how many folks still do crack bru. Shit might not be as big as before but folks still doing it and a rock goes for $100 so u sell 20 rocks in one day u still eating
Wait a minute?! Crack rock is $100?!?! How TF these crack buns be gettin high then?!?
Pico;7644165 said:Elzo69Renaissance;7644156 said:B_A;7644017 said:Elzo69Renaissance;7643744 said:Huey_C;7643288 said:Elzo69Renaissance;7637483 said:There's a snitch in there somewhere also....
Yea the song "hot nigga" smh
I'm pretty sure that it was ruled that you can't use an artist's words in a song against him in a court of law
Actually people have been convicted of doing so, and they tried to lock boosie for it too.
Like whom? Besides the case that Peeny Wally has mentioned
It happened to Mac dre
IAmDopeSmoke;7645178 said:loch121;7637700 said:AggyAF;7637411 said:http://www.dnainfo.com/new-york/20141218/civic-center/bobby-shmurdas-gs9-crew-charged-24-shootings-1-murder-investigators
They were involved in 24 shootings since 2013, including the shooting death of a rival 19-year-old gang member in an East Flatbush bodega on Feb. 8, 2013, and a June shooting this year where Shmurda fired into a crowd outside a Clarkson Avenue barbershop, investigators said.
“These are bad people,” Police Commissioner Bill Bratton said during a press conference at police headquarters. “They shouldn’t be celebrated and the fact their music is celebrated, and the so-called dance that they created, I would hope that those that emulate it would effectively understand what the source of it is.”
Police seized 21 weapons, 10 of which they found after arresting Shmurda and seven other crew members at the Quad Recording Studios near Rockefeller Center early Wednesday morning.
Shmurda, whose real name is Ackquille Pollard, was stopped in a vehicle after leaving the studio, where police found two weapons and a small quantity of crack in the car, according to investigators.
In one bizarre incident this past July, Rowdy Rebel, whose real name is Chad Marshall, was driving with crew member Santino Boderick in Boerum Hill when they spotted a rival gang member.
Boderick jumped out the car and fired shots into the rival gang member’s car, missing him, but shattering the window, narcotics prosecutor Bridget Brennan said during the press conference.
Rebel then performed at the Barclays center “hours after that shooting” at a celebrity basketball tournament wearing the same clothes form the shooting, Brennan added.
About a month later, a gun was found under a bed in a room registered to Rebel at the Millennium Hotel in Manhattan. Balistic tests matched it to the July 27 shooting, Brennan said.
Shmurda’s lawyer said he was targeted because the “government hates rap and by extension hates rappers.”
“If his name was Joe Blow, they’d have given him a desk-appearance ticket or cut him loose from the precinct,” said lawyer Howard Greenberg before the arraignment.
Shmurda was charged with conspiracy, reckless endangerment, criminal possession of a weapon and criminally using drug paraphernalia.
He was held on $2 million bond, which Greenberg said his record label, Epic Records, will pay.
Shmurda’s mother, Leslie Pollard, said after the arraignment, “It’s in God’s hands now."
Rebel was charged with conspiracy, attempted murder, attempted assault, reckless endangerment and criminal possession of a weapon.
Rashid "Rasha" Derissant, 22, was charged with murdering a member of the rival BMW crew in the 2013 shooting. Alex "A-Rod" Crandon, 22, who allegedly accompanied Derissant to the bodega at 803 Clarkson Avenue, was also charged with murder.
The other men charged were Santino “Cueno” Boderick, 21, Brian “Meeshie” Harvey, 23, Nicolas “Montana Flea” McCoy, 20, Javase “Fame” Pollard 22, Deshain “D-Boy” Cockett, 23, Remy “Fetti” Marshall, 19, Devon “Slice” Rodney, 21, Delroy “D-Rose” Edwards and Clevon “Dread” Pearson, 23.
Shmurda is due back in court on Jan. 29.
Bratton also expressed frustration at record labels for looking to make money off music glorifying violence and more broadly at society for embracing it.
“We are celebrating this, we are paying for this, we are glamorizing it,” Bratton said. “Shame on [record labels], shame on us for allowing it to happen.”
A man who identified himself as a representative from Epic Records at court declined to comment.
What year is this really.Niggas ain't even really selling crack like that.
What's really goin on?
![]()
U'd be surprised how many folks still do crack bru. Shit might not be as big as before but folks still doing it and a rock goes for $100 so u sell 20 rocks in one day u still eating