NEW X-RAIDED INTERVIEW,(well sorta) 2/02/09

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Sep 28, 2006
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Here you go yall. Sorry it took me so long to get it out, but better late than never they say. I wanna give a very sincere THANK YOU to Big X for allowing me to conduct this interview. Hope yall enjoy it.


2-02-09

The Authentic Article® Interview with X-Raided by: Dane "Money" Atwater

Q: There are a lot of misconceptions about your case; It's been reported by the LA Times that the youngest of the other 4 Individual defendants pleaded guilty and testified against you in return for prosecution as a juvenile, while everyone else were tried as adults. Is this accurate information? If so, who was the youngest individual?

A: I remember that interview with Geoff Boucher, for the LA Times. It seemed to have favored the law enforcement and leaned in a negative direction against us, as opposed to someone just reporting the facts. I was surprised, because Geoff Boucher is a sincerely decent guy. He probably truly believed what he wrote, but, it was wrong. As far as the youngest Individual, his name is Abdul Griffin, the step-brother, or half-brother, of Rosevelt "Baby Snake" Coleman. He took a deal to be prosecuted as a juvenile in exchange for his testimony against the rest of us, and that's what he did. He came to court and said whatever they wanted him to say, even against his own brother.

Q: In the same LA Times article, it was reported that Christopher McKinnie and Rosevelt Jermaine Coleman were accused as accomplices, but you and the remaining suspect, Maurice Samuel Proctor, were both tried as triggermen. Proctor was acquitted while you were convicted, correct?

A: Actually, we were all charged with murder. There wasn't a situation where anyone of us was said to have done it or not, they threw it out there at all of us and let it stick to whichever one of us it stuck to, whom they mostly hoped would be me, just based on media attention and everything over my being a rapper. Abdul told them that Chris and Rosevelt kicked in the door and served as look-outs while Maurice and I went in, armed. Yet, what they didn't report, because they could find out who they were, was that there were more than a dozen men there, and at least five of them were armed. They knew that was true but they couldn't prove It because Abdul didn't know who those guys were. No one else was willing to tell, so they couldn't go anywhere with it. Put it this way, out of the five of us who were arrested, four of them represented 29th Street Crip. I was the only one arrested from 24th Street. Can you read between those lines? Abdul didn't know nothing; he was a kid who never should have been around me. Rosevelt brought that guy around, I didn't even know him. He told the cops that me and Maurice were the gunmen, but he didn't know what he was talking about because he testified that he never even went in the house. He didn't see who fired any shots. He was just saying whatever It took for him to honor his deal with the district attorney, but we have him on record at least three times saying he didn't go in the house. Unless he could see through walls, he couldn't have seen who fired a shot, nevertheless who all had guns. There was no way he could have known that first hand. At the end of it all, Chris and Rosevelt, who were tried together, were convicted of second degree gang related murder; and in a separate trial a year later, I was convicted of first degree murder, and Maurice was acquitted.

Q: In an Interview with Worldwideconnected.com, you said that Christopher "LiI Venom" McKinnie was released after he won his appeal for a new trial. Does this help you at all for an appeal in your case?

A: Absolutely. My case is so shaky, man, all I have to do is throw the right amount of money at it and I'd be home, right now. Any major company or factor right now in the game could get me out of here the same way Suge went and got Pac in 1995. If someone threw a million at my case, it would fall apart and I'd walk right out of here worth 100 million overnight. Chris got out with one lawyer tugging at his case, so no doubt, a team of them could bust me right out, for ineffective assistance of counsel alone. But also because the D.A. that prosecuted our case was fired for possession of a controlled substance and child pornography less than a month after my trial. Ethical questions abound. A few good tugs, the whole thing would unravel.

Q: What ended up happening to Scooby, Scrappy, LiI Bread, and Baby Snake?

A: This is what I mean about Geoff Boucher writing a story that leaned a certain way. Those are names the newspaper got from Abdul Griffin. The dude didn't even know our NAMES, man. He made those names up, besides LiI Bread, who is Maurice Proctor, and Baby Snake, who is Rosevelt Coleman. Those are the only 2 people Abdul knew, so those were the only names he got right. Geoff Boucher could have pointed that out if he wanted to write a thorough story. Abdul told them "Ice Cream," "Scooby,” ” Scrappy," “Baby Snake” and “LiI Bread” committed this crime, before the COPS told them who we all reaIIy were and showed him pictures. Why wasn't anyone asking how he could be wrong about the names if his info was so valid? I have it in black and white. He didn't even know our names, man. He didn't know I was X-Raided the rapper until the cops told him and showed him a picture of me. He couldn't name or point out anyone until the media and the cops started telling him who we were, which is why he only got those of us who were already caught. At least 7 other men managed to walk right away from all of this.

Q: Have you had contact with any of them since the trial?

A: We were all in the county jail together. After that, we went to prison. Lil Bread visited me after he was acquitted. The forewoman of his jury fell in love with him; I swear to God, they visited me together. She was convinced that we were getting screwed and she apologized for not being able to have helped me, since we had separate juries. We had the same trial, same courtroom, but separate juries. I was found guilty first, and I think that helped them let Maurice go. They found Snake and Venom guilty, and then me. Counting Abdul, which was four people who were found guilty of killing one person, with one bullet out of one gun. Not of conspiracy or aiding, but of KILLING one person. I think Maurice's jury felt like, “How can we all have killed one person?” That was the last time I saw Maurice, and I don't blame him. This whole life we led was bullsh*t. I don't advocate this sh*t. Any kid reading this interview, you can do more for your hood free than you can do in prison. You can do more for your homies if you're free than you can in prison. Help your family. Forget this stuff, for real. I swear to God, it's buIIsh*t. Anyway, as far as Venom, he was my cellmate at MuIe Creek back in 2000 until he transferred to Lancaster, in LA. I didn’t even know he went home on appeal. I had my Iady run a search on him because we were sending some money to him for Christmas, and she couldn't find him. They kept saying he had paroled, and I kept telling her that had to be wrong, but we found out he was free, had beat the case on appeal. Me and Baby Snake only communicated, after the county jail, one time. We were going in different directions. I was trying to get my life together, get my mind right, and Rosevelt was trying to be a better gangster. We talked about that. The people he wanted respect from were different from the people I want respect from. This situation made me realize, with time, that we blew it, as far as what our lives could have been as far as being assets to our families and the hood. I'm less concerned with what a so-called gangster thinks about me than with, say, how my family feels, how my associates feel. What good is the respect of someone who's respect is worthless? I wish Rosevelt the best, wish Maurice the best, wish Chris the best, and God bless the dead. That's gangster.

Q: How do you feel about your decision to maintain the "Code of silence" when one of the others didn't?

A: I don't think a man's principles should be based on what someone else does. If that was the case, MLK couldn't have taken it when them dogs were biting him and they were spraying him with those water hoses. He took that, and now Barack is president because he took it. I'm operating on a level way smaller than that, but these larger examples help me understand how minute what I'm going through really is. My hands are not clean in all of this. Other people's hands may be bloody, but mine definitely have mud on them, God knows. I have never went in a courtroom and pointed at any man, and I never will. There is no soul on Earth can say he went to trial or prelim and Anerae Brown was sitting there saying a word about him. It has never happened, it never wiII. I can show you newspaper 'articles where they were saying my name, the so-called homies, before my trial. Their lawyers saying my name, during their trial, saying it was Anerae, it was X-Raided. So-called gangsters coming to court and saying "X-Raided is impulsive," on the stand at my trial. So they can say what they want. I ain't never sent a man to prison. Whatever slip or mistake I ever made, I never sent nobody to prison, never testified against a soul, and that ain't for no code of silence, that's for a code of Anerae Brown.

Q: Was there ever a civil suit filed?

A: We dealt with a Son of Sam lawsuit back in 1999 but it was dismissed because California's Son of Sam law was struck down by the Supreme Court. It doesn't exist right now, but I'm sure it will be back, bigger and better. That's what lawyers are for. They can handle all of that. I'm about as ready for whatever as we're going to get.

Q: If your sentence for gang related homicide was for 31 years, at what point are you eligible for parole?

A: I am eligible for parole In September of 2013. Four more years. I'm not sure how that's going to play out, but we'll see. My personal opinion is that the best way for me to get out of here is with a team of lawyers walking me right out of the front door with a court order, the same way Suge Knight went and got Tupac.

Q: Were you arrested immediately after Mrs. Harris was murdered?

A: No. I was the last one to be arrested. I was arrested In Arizona, on my way to do a show. I was held In the Maricopa County Jail until I was extradited back to Sacramento. It's been all bad ever since.

Q: Your many supporters believe that you were railroaded in your case. Can you help explain those sentiments?

A: For one, Sacramento is the law enforcement capitol of California. Half of the people on my jury were either law enforcement, attorneys, teachers or firemen. Real talk. That ain't no jury of my peers. For two, O.J. had us in a bad light, Snoop Dogg was on trial for murder, Tupac was dealing with a rape case, and Mike Tyson was, too. It was bad timing. Black men weren't getting fair shots in the media and in court. I still think I needed better representation and could have done better if had it, but stilI. I had one of the three most highly publicized trial is in Sacramento history, behind Dorothy Puentes and Solomon, a couple of mass murderers. It was a situation where the jury pool was tainted by constant negative press. It became a witch hunt to convict the rapper. Hip Hop wasn't as welcome in white American households then. We were still the enemy. All the little white girls buying Wayne right now would never have been allowed to have that in their house back then. Now, they are the actual targeted demographic for record companies. Back when I was on trial, we were the enemy. Ice-T had "Cop Killer" out when I was on trial, all of that going on in the news. I didn't stand a chance. I was as close as any of those people would ever get to being able to say, "Fu*k aII of you." If they let me go, I may as well have had a lottery ticket. I was probably the best, hottest rapper in the world at the time that no one knew about.

Q: Can you talk about some of the evidence that the prosecution used against you?

A: They used Abdul Griffin against me, man. The media used my music and my music related images. They used my own attempts to explain that I didn't do it against me. When they say, "Anything you say can and will be used against you," they are dead serious. If, you say, "I didn't do it," they can and will use that against you. Can and will. That's a cold statement, homie. "I didn't do it." can and will be used against you. You can't say ANYTHING. But then, when you won't say anything, the media and the cops call it an admission of guilt and accuse you of lawyering up. It's a catch 22 but the best side of the catch is the quiet side, for real.

Q: Did you testify at your trial? Were you advised one way or another, by your attorney? Do you wish you had or hadn't?

A: Yes, I did testify. My attorney worked it to where Maurice and his jury were not present, and when he pulled that off, he told me that the best shot I had was to contradict Abdul's testimony and show that he got all of his Info from the cops, media and the transcripts. I wish I hadn't done that, and I wish my attorney hadn't told me it was the best thing to do. I didn't know he was wrong, he was my Lawyer and my life was on the Iine I listened to him, and it was a mistake. He could have shown that Abdul was lying by using the transcripts themselves to point out alI of his contradictions and how he didn't know things for months and then would all of a sudden know those same things months later. He should have kept me off the stand and just handled his business and if I could do it all again, I would fire the dude first of all, and then never take the stand, and fire anyone who suggested it. I didn't think anything of it then. It was my trial, my jury, my ass was the only one on the line. Nothing I said could hurt a soul. It was the perfect situation, as far as not harming anyone. That was how I looked at it, so I missed the part of how it could hurt myself. I wasn't thinking like that. I was thinking not to hurt Maurice, which I obviously didn't do since he was acquitted after I testified. I think I did more for Maurice than I did for myself. I regret that. The ideal situation would have helped us both, or helped me as long as it didn't harm him.

Q: How long did your entire trial take? Were you in the county jail during the trail? How long now have you been incarcerated?

A: My trial took six months total, from start to sentencing. I was in the county jail the whole time. I've been incarcerated since 1992, besides a few brief months of freedom before it alI went bad. I've been in prison since 1996, right before Tupac died.

Q: You've been to at least 5 different prisons since your initial imprisonment. Why did you get moved around so much?

A: When I was first sent to prison, I was seriously gang banging. That's the only way to put it. I was resigned to it. Like, "Fu*k it, I'm in prison now cuzz, it is what it is." I felt like anyone who had a problem with me, I had a problem with their problem. A lot of people claim to be gang bangers but they don't even have an enemy. They don't have to see their enemies. They just wear blue and red and say Cuzz or Blood at their nice houses in their nice neighborhoods. Looking tough for the cameras and the girls. In prison though, everyone gang banging are the ones who were really gang banging on the streets. That's the thing about gang banging. You're going to either die, go to jail, or stop participating and move away from it. There's nothing wrong with that. I advocate it. I should have done It.'Wayne?, Game yelling Blood, Snoop yelling Cuzz. Them dudes really have ties to some solid men to back up their claims. I've done time with the men Game shouts out in his songs, walked the yard with them dudes. But they know it’s true. Fu*k gang banging. It's seriously stupid and destructive. But in prison, you can't run. Everyone is in one gang or another. If you can bang in prison…hey… you're the real deal. That was something I aspired to, because I was sick. I was addicted to the rush from socializing and being among gangsters. Doing gangster things. But what good is the respect of someone who's respect is worthless? It came back to that. Now I don't care what someone claims. Blood, Crip, Cumi, or Jama. If you're a good man. I want to know you and grow from you. I got moved around a lot because I got kicked out of prisons a lot. Prisons are like college campuses with cells. I would basically get suspended, expelled, for being the cause of too much drama. Every yard I hit for a while, the Bloods and Crips would clash, over me. Almost 80% of the time. I have a lot of love from a lot of good men. Hoover Lon loves X-Raided as a little homie. Hoover AI. Bird. Whiskey from Santana Blocc, who was In Monster Cody's book. Turtle's brother. He was my cellmate man. Monster calls me his little brother. Tony Stacy. Barry "B-Dub" Woods was my cellmate. These dudes created their hoods, are factors on an elite level and most of the guys running around yeIIing Crip have never met these guys. I've been around the rawest of the bloods, locked behind bars with them, in riots against them. Where I've been. You can't move away from your enemy because you are literally chained to them. You either establish some respect or it’s going to be a long stretch. I spent a lot of time establishing myself, whether it was necessary or not. I don't advise it for anyone with any type of logic and common sense.

Q: What was the toughest prison you spent time in? Why? How does Pleasant Valley compare to that?

A: I would say the toughest prison I spent time at was Salinas Valley. It HAD the highest rate of incidents in the state of California. Calipatria was with the business, too. Different places were raw for different reasons. Folsom was race wars, Salinas was Bloods and Crips. Calipatria was convicts against the cops. It's always something. Right now, Pleasant Valley State Prison HAS the highest rate of incidents in the state California. We're on lockdown right now because Black and Mexican inmates had a race riot a few weeks ago with knives and razors. That's right here on the yard I live on. I gotta find my way around or through that and it ain't even none of my business, isn’t even my beef. This ain't fun. I don't advise this for anyone. Don't go to prison, man. Stay free, love your family, this ain't the bizness.

Q: Pete Harned was the prosecutor in your case. It was reported In the LA Times that you developed a correspondence with him. How did that come about? What is your relationship with him Iike now, if any?

A: It's funny. You hear people talk about being "gangsta" and doing "gangsta" things. Listen. Pete Harned was fired from the D.A.'s office, right after my trial. An attorney who had a relationship with both of us put us together because we had common enemies. Do you understand this sh*t. man? Do you recognize? The people who fired Pete Harned and went after his career, are the same people who sent him after me and put me in prison. And they had just turned on him, betrayed him, and in the process, they became a common enemy. Who better to tell you the recipe to bake a cake you like, than the person who baked the cake himself ? Pete Harned knew how to unravel my case better than anyone else because he was the one who wound it in the first place. You don't come at someone with his level of education without understanding how to achieve your goal. There is no stupidity inside of me homie, I just look Iike this. Stupidity put me in prison and I have been trying ever since to rid myself of it so I never fall victim to it again. I'm ready to be free, the difference between me and many men. Pete Harned had been victimized by people he trusted, just like me. He had been betrayed by his friends, just like me. And the people who did it to him worked at the District Attorney's office, just like the people who did it to me. If you can't understand what I'm saying, you need to just kill yourself and let someone with a brain breathe that air you're wasting. I'm no longer in touch with Pete Harned, because of bad business practices by people who did not understand what I was trying to do. The relationship was incorrectly nurtured by my people. I wish Pete Harned the best and I hope he's successful and doing weII right now.

Q: It was rumored on the Internet that you are in protective custody and not in general population. Can you shed some light on that subject?

A: The California Department of Corrections has a protective housing unit. Which is where Charles Manson is at. I'm not in any protective housing unit. All you gotta do is call Pleasant Valley and ask them how many violent incidents they have per month of Alpha Facility, and they can tell you about the ten people who just got stabbed and sliced with razors three weeks ago and explain to you why we've been locked down ever since outta fear of having a full blown race riot. Give them a call. If you have media credentials, they'II even let you come ask me yourself. I'm not glorifying this sh*t, this place is terrible. I don't want to be here, in prison, around people stabbing and slicing one another. I am trapped here. If I could move away from it, I would move away from it. There's no way I would live around something like this just so you could say I'm a thug. If that's what it took to get your respect, then your respect is worthless and you have no concern for if I live or die. F*ck you, kindly, if that's the case, cuz , I don't wish harm to any of you.

Q: After you left Black Market Records, you started Madman Records. That seemed to be a short lived endeavor. What went wrong with Madman Records?

A: I think, when it comes to money, everyone has their own definition of what a lot is. Everyone has their own definition of what rich is. For me, on one hand, I was dealing with people who thought we had already hit it big. They thought we had a lot of money, at that level. To me, it wasn't even the tip of the Iceberg. I kept saying, "If we lock it in with a lawyer, an accountant and get this money flowing through the bank correctly, someone will write us a 10 to 20 million dollar check." I wanted to put all of the money in the bank and give control of it to our accountant and attorney, who happened to be Pete Harned at the time. Do you understand what I am saying to you? Now, my people were fighting with me about that. No one trusted my leadership. They kept questioning my judgment without being educated about my overall plan, because they wouldn't let me teach them and show them. Then, if I told them too much, they would jump ahead of me and work would suffer. That's fine. I can handle that, but if the money isn't going where I want it to go and I am the reason the money exists, then I'm out. I walked away from Madman Records because they wouldn't listen to me but they wanted to live off of my dime. I'm not going to be able to allow that. Ever. At the same time, the boy Goldyn "Kingpen" Cooper was selling me out to Internal Affairs, telling them that an officer was allegedly bringing contraband into the institution for me. A dude I fed and clothed. He sold me out and got an officer named D.R. Stanley fired, probably for a reduction in his sentence or just to stay there at Mule Creek. Where it’s calm and peaceful. If you can find D.R. Stanley, ask him if I speak a lie. He lost his job because Goldyn "Kingpen" Cooper is a rat. Among others. That's why I got kicked out of Mule Creek. While I was sitting in the hole, everyone kind of scattered. Threw mud at my name to justify abandoning me, but at the same time, yelled my name in order to milk their affiliation with me for money. It was a learning experience for me.

Q: In what way is Bloc Star Entertainment set up in a better fashion to succeed?

A: No one can touch the money besides the accountant. The company is under the authority of a corporate and entertainment law firm. Those two things killed all of the drama. At this point. AlI I experience in a negative way is the difficulties of trying to teach people who already think they know something. But that's a part of the job. I'll take it. I've delegated authority to the right people. I saw what happened with Shyne. After Def Jam gave him that 30 million. I took measures to insure that whoever throws a check at Bloc Star Entertainment. They can be confident that the money is safe and we're following the letter of the law and the rules. I have the right to give my opinion and advice to anyone who wants it. And they have the right to follow it in the execution of their duties. We're waterproof over at Bloc Star Entertainment. This thing can run with or without me without missing a beat.

Q: Bloc Star was established in 2005. It seemed to be started as a company that had a stable of Sacramento talent. Now it seems to have shifted more to focusing on putting out X-Raided albums. What created this perceived shift in direction?

A: Bloc Star was never meant to showcase Sacramento talent. It was meant to showcase talent in general. We started off with Loki, who went out and got T.A. for us. I got at Big No Love, who brought Sav Siccness and Bleezo to the table. Both of whom I had high hopes for. The problem was work ethic. None of those guys were very dedicated and thorough with it. I don't know that they understand the need to be productive, as far as volume of work and output. I don't even think any of them have solo projects from 2005 to now. How can that be? You're talking to a guy who put out six full albums, that's close "to 80 songs in 36 months. And I'm in prison. So it’s hard for me to sympathize with some free dudes who don't understand what it means to be prolific. Right now, my people have enough material for five new X-Raided projects. That’s a little above 60 songs. So what's happening is that, since I can't rely on anyone else to be prolific, I will do it myself. My people can handle getting my projects made. I don''t need anyone's help and I never did, I just wanted to do it a certain way, introducing talent, because they're free and they don't have the restrictions I do. But that isn’t working. So it’s just me and Filthy Rich right now. Emcee and producer, with my people handling their business. I'm just sitting back watching it all unfold.

Q: Can you tell what happened with the missing verse from "The Mission Statement," from the Ignition album?

A: When they were producing that song, they had a hard time finding the count for where to place my vocals on the track. We didn’t have time for them to keep messing around with it so Loki shut it down and moved on to something else. We resolved that situation with the rest of the songs and anything coming In the future. Me and Filthy Rich that is. He has no issues with my start count. As far as figuring out which snare I'm coming in on. The one, the two, the three, etc. Rich knows how to follow my delivery better than anyone ever has, and we have a count at the beginning of alI the vocals. It's a dead issue now.

Q: What new material can your fans be looking out for?

A: Right now, we're releasing the new X-Raided album, The Eternally Unforgiven Project, on April 21 2009. We're re-releasing my Unforgiven Volume I project, too, on Bloc Star Entertainment. For the record, if it ain't Gangway or Bloc Star, don't buy it. It ain't X-Raided! Anything that doesn't have Gangway or Bloc Star on it, download it for free! Give it to your friends! Pass it all around! (X-Raided laughs out loud.) There's a lot more to come after Eternally Unforgiven and the re-release of Unforgiven I, but let's just stick to those for now. We can see what people have to say about me as an emcee, what they think of the new stuff, and we'll go from there after that. I think everyone is going to be shocked at how dope I am. I don't think anyone really knows. It's kind of funny. I'm the best rapper in the world, no one can out-write me. Dr. Dre needs to let me write Detox, between me and Em, we could make it a masterpiece. I want to write Ice Cube a new album, too, give him a new delivery and some creative gangster rhymes. Game is the only one writing gangster rhymes out West I'm even impressed by, besides Crooked I. Now we're going to start asking where "The Nefarious X-Raided" fits in. I think a lot of them already know I'm raw; I'm just going to give them something to strengthen their arguments. April 21, 2009. Don't forget I tried to tell you.

X-Ralded's new album Eternally Unforgiven will be available 4/21/09 on Bloc Star Entertainment myspace.com/xraldedloc [email protected] X-Ralded's The X-Filez Volumes 1 -3 available now on Gangway/Bloc Star Entertainment
Copyright 2009 A. Brown/D. Atwater
 
Nov 25, 2003
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#6
YEH...THAT WAS A GOOD READ....KINDA PACIFIED MY SPIRIT 4 NOW...I'VE ALWAYS LOVED X 4 HIS INTELLIGENCE....& THE FACT THAT HE WANTS 2 DO BETTER....THE OTHER INTERVIEW SEEMED MORE FRUSTRATION RELATED....I KINDA TOOK IT LIKE X THINKS NIGGAS ARE OUT HERE RICH & FORGOT ABOUT HIM OR SOMETHING...HE IS AND WILL ALWAYS BE A SAC PIONEER 2 ME CUZ I ACTUALLY USED 2 BUMP PSYCHOACTIVE BEFORE I KNEW C-BO OR HAD ANYTHING 2 DO WITH AWOL....I ALWAYS FELT X WAS THE NIGGA...HE WAS ON THE SAME SHIT I WAS ON....I KNOW IF HE WAS FREE THINGS WOULD BE VERY DIFFERENT....I FEEL HE DID HIS TIME....NOW LET THE MAN WALK.....MUCH LOVE 2 X-RAIDED & EVERYBODY IN THE CAMP....IF HE NEEDS 2 REACH OUT 2 ME HOLLA
 

fillyacup

Rest In Free SoCo
Sep 27, 2004
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#7
real shit. everytime he stresses how prison isnt where you want to be, that shit hits me like a ton a reality bricks. take a step out of your shoes an realize what the fuck your doing and is it prioritized correctly?
 
Nov 25, 2003
5,610
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SUNSHINE CITY,CA
#8
X IS A GOOD EXAMPLE 4 A LOT OF US...& HE IS A SMART PERSON....I FEEL HIM ON A LOT HE'S SAYING CUZ AS WE GET OLDER WE REALIZE WHAT'S SIGNIFICANT IN OUR EVERYDAY LIVES & WHEN YOU HAVE KIDS AND A FAMILY RUNNING BEHIND NIGGAS THAT WILL LEAD YOU 2 PRISON IS NOT THE WAY 2 GO...I ALWAYS LISTENED 2 THE SMART GANGSTAS WHO USED 2 TELL ME I NEEDED 2 GO 2 SCHOOL CUZ MY MOM WAS A TEACHER...JUST CUZ PEOPLE GANGBANG DOESN'T MEAN THEY DON'T HAVE INTELLECTUAL KNOWLEDGE & WISDOM....YOU JUST HAVE 2 KNOW HOW 2 DECIPHER WHAT'S RIGHT AND WRONG 4 YOU...I NEVER WAS A GO-BOY CUZ AT A YOUNG AGE I FIGURED OUT MY BIG HOMIE WAS ON DRUGS...I ONLY GIVE A FUCC ABOUT WHO GIVES A FUCC ABOUT ME....FREE X-RAIDED.....HE'S MY GENERATIONS' VERSION OF A REAL POLITICAL PRISONER....I THINK FANS SHOULD SUPPORT HIM MORE...& I THINK HIM & LYNCH HAVE A CHEMISTRY THAT NO ONE ELSE HAS EVER HAD.....HE WOULD HAVE GIVEN LYNCH THE EDGE THAT I THINK WE ALL BELIEVE HE NEEDS & HE COULD GIVE X THE WISDOM & EXPERIENCE HE'S BEEN MISSING DUE 2 HIS INCARCERATION...I MEAN...OBAMA IS REALLY THE PRESIDENT...GOING BACCWARDS OR BEEFIN WILL NEVER HELP NONE OF US...DON'T NOBODY HAVE 2 PROVE HOW HARD THEY ARE ANYMORE....THAT'S 4 TEENAGERS...IF NIGGAS AIN'T GOT NO STRIPES YET...THEY WEREN'T BORN 2 BE A G....POSITIVE UNIFICATION IS UNSTOPPABLE....TIME AIN'T WAITIN 4 NONE OF US...100
 
Aug 20, 2003
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#9
X IS A GOOD EXAMPLE 4 A LOT OF US...& HE IS A SMART PERSON....I FEEL HIM ON A LOT HE'S SAYING CUZ AS WE GET OLDER WE REALIZE WHAT'S SIGNIFICANT IN OUR EVERYDAY LIVES & WHEN YOU HAVE KIDS AND A FAMILY RUNNING BEHIND NIGGAS THAT WILL LEAD YOU 2 PRISON IS NOT THE WAY 2 GO...I ALWAYS LISTENED 2 THE SMART GANGSTAS WHO USED 2 TELL ME I NEEDED 2 GO 2 SCHOOL CUZ MY MOM WAS A TEACHER...JUST CUZ PEOPLE GANGBANG DOESN'T MEAN THEY DON'T HAVE INTELLECTUAL KNOWLEDGE & WISDOM....YOU JUST HAVE 2 KNOW HOW 2 DECIPHER WHAT'S RIGHT AND WRONG 4 YOU...I NEVER WAS A GO-BOY CUZ AT A YOUNG AGE I FIGURED OUT MY BIG HOMIE WAS ON DRUGS...I ONLY GIVE A FUCC ABOUT WHO GIVES A FUCC ABOUT ME....FREE X-RAIDED.....HE'S MY GENERATIONS' VERSION OF A REAL POLITICAL PRISONER....I THINK FANS SHOULD SUPPORT HIM MORE...& I THINK HIM & LYNCH HAVE A CHEMISTRY THAT NO ONE ELSE HAS EVER HAD.....HE WOULD HAVE GIVEN LYNCH THE EDGE THAT I THINK WE ALL BELIEVE HE NEEDS & HE COULD GIVE X THE WISDOM & EXPERIENCE HE'S BEEN MISSING DUE 2 HIS INCARCERATION...I MEAN...OBAMA IS REALLY THE PRESIDENT...GOING BACCWARDS OR BEEFIN WILL NEVER HELP NONE OF US...DON'T NOBODY HAVE 2 PROVE HOW HARD THEY ARE ANYMORE....THAT'S 4 TEENAGERS...IF NIGGAS AIN'T GOT NO STRIPES YET...THEY WEREN'T BORN 2 BE A G....POSITIVE UNIFICATION IS UNSTOPPABLE....TIME AIN'T WAITIN 4 NONE OF US...100
THAT'S 100% REAL SPIT RITE THERE.TAY I RESPECT YOU NOT BECAUSE YOU RAP.I MEAN I AM A FAN OF YOUR MUSIC.BUT FOR THE SIMPLE FACT THAT YOU CAN SEE BEYOND ALL THE BULLSHIT AND CAN SPEAK FROM THE HEART ON SOME REAL SHIT.MUCH RESPECT....
 
Apr 25, 2002
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#11
I Feel what you sayin Tay, I just hope X gets out before something stupid or bad happends to him you feel (Knock on wood) I am not trying to be negative but It just seems like right when something good is about to happen to the right folks some shit always pops off to pull the guy down you feel me? I will say a prayer of hope for the homie Big X Loc in hopes he will be home soon. I think its really sad how bad they doing him. I been following his case and music for years. I remember writing him letters when he was in soledad. I had to send him the pen and paper supplies cause he didn't even have that at the time. If I didn't I wouldn't get a reply lol. The guy has loads and loads of knowlege and is smart as hell. I was not one to pass judgment on weather he did or didnt do the crime but to here the facts now and to pretty clearly hear the evidence before me, I think its sad he is still sitting in the pin when he should be free spending time with his wife and family. But when you start to involve politics shit starts to get ugly really fast and someone has to take the fall for the mess that was created so long ago and lord knows its not going to be the people responsible cause if it was they would be sitting in the spot X-Raided is and thats just not going to happen. So unless he gets the cash to win a stupid ass fuckin appeal or be walked out (how i feel about it) he remains locked down. The whole thing is just fuckin stupid. Sorry just had to release some frustration. Much love to the homie X-Raided.