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Interesting case. IMO he shouldn't have been sent to prison.
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Good. This was so much bullshit...
You don't even know who that is. You're not cool like I am.
You really just posted a thread on meek mill. Wow, I have seen it all
Here you go, start with this.
Do I need to school you on some meek mill? How dare you. I’m a young pup, this is my comfort zone. You’re out of your element pupparino
Lol no I have been listening to meek for a bit. I started listening three albums ago. He’s a great rapper. His album from 2017, wins and losses is really goodLet me guess, you heard him while playing GTA.
You're out of your mind. Dude popped a wheelie or something!Good. This was so much bullshit...
Probably not your speed lolI pretty much only like Public Enemy, should I listen to this guy?
Probably not your speed lol
Try him out if you like.
his many, many violent actions towards others.
Fuck him.
I count 2 incidents of violence in the Wikipedia article you quoted. The second was quite minor.
1
https://web.archive.org/web/2015050...pper-meek-mill-shares-story-police-brutality/
https://web.archive.org/web/2015050...experience-with-police-brutality-on-instagram
2
http://www.tmz.com/2017/03/15/meek-mill-st-louis-airport-fight-photo/

I count 5 violent acts, and probable liability in the murder case.
1. Assaulted a cop.
2. Death threat against his judge.
3. Death threat the DA.
4. Assaulted a citizen.
5. Assaulted another citizen.
6? Depending on what he was dealing, people's lives may have been ruined or ended.
7? ...............his videos
The violation was a failure to report travel plans as required and social media postings that resulted in death threats to the judge, Assistant District Attorney (ADA) and probation officer assigned his case
On November 29, 2017, Meek Mill and Roc Nation were sued by the family of Jaquan Graves who was shot and killed in the parking lot outside a Connecticut concert in December 2016. Graves had just left the facility when gunfire started and he was killed.
1 was where he didn't cooperate, so they chased him and beat him up. (See link I gave, a footnote in the Wikipedia article.)
2 and 3 were his fans making threats, not him.
4 and 5 were the 2 guys who took pictures of him in the airport. It was 2 guys vs. him, about pictures, so I doubt he was very violent. All 3 were arrested. (See link I gave, a footnote in the Wikipedia article.)
You left out this one. Again it was his fans, not him.

Following a five-month campaign by his supporters to get him out, the state Supreme Court on Tuesday directed a Philadelphia judge who had jailed him to immediately issue an order releasing him on unsecured bail...
He was whisked from the State Correctional Institution in Chester by helicopter to nearby Philadelphia, just in time to ring the ceremonial bell before the start of Game 5 of the 76ers playoff series against the Miami Heat...
“Welcome home Meek Mill,” the game announcer told the rapper, who wore a Joel Embiid jersey and sat courtside next to actor Kevin Hart, Sixers co-owner Michael Rubin, Philadelphia Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie and Democratic Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf...
Mill...thanked his many supporters and visitors, who included Rubin, New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft and Democratic Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney.
...prosecutors said they agreed with his lawyers that he should get a new trial because of questions raised about the arresting officer. The now-retired officer was among a list of police officers the prosecutor’s office has sought to keep off the witness stand in cases across the city because of credibility questions.
Mill initially made news five months ago when a judge locked him up after he popped a wheelie on a dirt bike— yes, that act constituted a violation of his probation.
His original offense — simple assault, possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver and possession of a loaded weapon — occurred 11 years ago. [He was on probation] for more than a decade.
Mill’s story demonstrates the often excessive nature of probation in America: The musician had not been convicted of any new crimes since his original offense, but was slated to spend two to four years behind bars...
Our jails are filled with individuals like Mill who violated probation restrictions (including unreasonably long sentences) that were so prohibitive they were almost impossible to abide by...
I saw heartbreaking stories, far worse than Mill's, firsthand when I worked as an assistant public defender in Baltimore...
