TI sentencing tomorrow...

  • Wanna Join? New users you can now register lightning fast using your Facebook or Twitter accounts.
Dec 25, 2003
12,356
218
0
70
#1
T.I. to be sentenced to prison Friday

By BILL RANKIN
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Thursday, March 26, 2009


Federal weapons charges, with their accompanying harsh sentences, are enough to take anyone down. Yet since his guilty plea a year ago, Atlanta rapper T.I. has enjoyed the greatest success of his career.


His CD, “Paper Trail,” debuted atop the Billboard charts in October. He produced two No. 1 singles, including “Live Your Life,” featuring Rihanna. Last month, he appeared at the Grammys, where he won an award for best rap performance by a duo or group.


Enlarge this image
File photo
T.I. pleaded guilty to illegal firearms possession and being a convicted felon with a firearm.



But T.I., one of the world’s best-known rap artists, is about to take a one-year hiatus at a federal detention facility. On Friday, as part of his extraordinary deal with federal prosecutors, T.I. will be sentenced a year after his guilty plea.


According to the plea agreement, T.I., whose real name is Clifford Harris Jr., will be sentenced to one year and a day.


The extra day means T.I. can carve 15 percent off of his sentence with good behavior. Under U.S. Bureau of Prison rules, inmates can earn such credit only if they are sentenced to longer than a year in prison. T.I. should serve an estimated 298 days — or a little less than 10 months. He is expected to get credit for the two weeks he sat in jail after his arrest and before posting a $3 million bond.


T.I.’s troubles began Oct. 13, 2007, just hours before he was to receive two awards at the BET Hip-Hop Awards ceremony in Atlanta. He was arrested in a Midtown parking lot by federal agents for trying to buy machine guns and silencers. A search of his car and home yielded a number of handguns and rifles, a problem because T.I. had a prior felony conviction for cocaine distribution.


T.I. pleaded guilty to illegal firearms possession and being a convicted felon with a firearm.


Federal sentencing guidelines recommended T.I. serve at least four years and nine months behind bars.


But T.I.’s defense team worked out an unheard-of deal with federal prosecutors: If T.I. would perform at least 1,000 hours of community service, telling kids about the pitfalls of crime, drugs and gangs and encouraging them to respect the law, he could surrender to the Bureau of Prisons a year later and get a reduced sentence.


Area criminal defense lawyers howled in protest, saying T.I. traded his celebrity for leniency. Federal prosecutors countered the rapper’s influential message would help prevent crime.


T.I. has fulfilled his part of the bargain, Steve Sadow, one of the rapper’s lawyers, said.


“T.I. took this opportunity and ran with it beyond anyone’s expectations.”
A sentencing memorandum filed Wednesday by T.I.’s defense team says the rapper has complied with all the requirements of his plea agreement. This includes serving 300 days of home confinement, attending more than 260 events and earning 1,006 hours of community service credit.


T.I. has been to 25 states and spoken to tens of thousands of teens and adults.


Over the past year, he went to 58 schools, 12 Boys and Girls Clubs, nine churches and other community functions. He was visited two Georgia Department of Juvenile Justice facilities, one in Columbus and another in DeKalb County.


After T.I. spoke to 160 high school teenagers at the Georgia Supreme Court, Chief Justice Leah Ward Sears called the rapper’s presentation “outstanding.”


“You have the courage to carefully search your soul, oftentimes wrestling with demons that the rest of us are terrified to disturb,” Sears wrote in a letter attached to the sentencing memo. “I am sure that you have touched many young lives.”
 
May 16, 2002
8,502
11,715
113
52
#5
All these rappers going to jail has become a got damn gimmick and is glorified by the media as much as fans and people in the street / hood.

Since when is going to jail a good thing? Muthaphuckaz act like it's a great thing. Like their street cred will earn them more stripes & album sales. Yeah, that may be cool to the muthaphuckaz short timin' it. Tell that to the people doing 25 with an L.

Ask them lifers how many of they Homies on the outs put money in their books, write, or send them things. Maybe the first year (if not sooner) and life goes on in the outs and they forget about the Homie doing life.
 
Apr 25, 2002
7,232
170
63
43
www.idealsentertainment.com
#9
He was facing a lot of time. Dude is lucky to be a celebrity, because they know he can reach way more people than they can. Personally, I'm glad he's only doing a year. I think he has a decent head on his shoulders, and if he continues doing what he has been doing for the past year maybe some of these kids will hear him and stop acting like fuckin' morons.
 

ThornCity503

Rest In Peace
May 19, 2008
1,960
299
0
45
#15
All these rappers going to jail has become a got damn gimmick and is glorified by the media as much as fans and people in the street / hood.

Since when is going to jail a good thing? Muthaphuckaz act like it's a great thing. Like their street cred will earn them more stripes & album sales. Yeah, that may be cool to the muthaphuckaz short timin' it. Tell that to the people doing 25 with an L.

Ask them lifers how many of they Homies on the outs put money in their books, write, or send them things. Maybe the first year (if not sooner) and life goes on in the outs and they forget about the Homie doing life.
fuck drugs
 
Jun 3, 2006
11,491
51
0
46
#17
Say what you want about Ti but Ive got more respect for him for actually trying to reach out and help these kids and keep them from being lil fuck ups. hope he does his time and comes out
he reachin out and playin the role just to save his own ass...bet if he never got caught he wouldnt be doin all this shit...
 
Dec 17, 2002
3,204
782
113
WWW.SICCNESS.NET
#19
Rapper T.I. sentenced to year on weapons charges
March 27, 2009, 10:28 AM EST
ATLANTA (AP) -- A judge sentenced rapper T.I. to one year and a day behind bars on federal weapons charges on Friday.

The 28-year-old rapper, whose real name is Clifford Harris, apologized at the hearing.

"Today I would like to say thank you to some, and apologize to all," the rapper told U.S. District Judge Charles Pannell Jr. at sentencing.

Harris pleaded guilty last March after he was arrested in 2007, attempting to buy unregistered machine guns and silencers. The arrest on Oct. 13 of that year occurred blocks from where he was to headline the BET Hip-Hop Awards in Atlanta hours later.

He will have between 30 and 60 days to report to prison. Harris already has completed about 1,000 hours of community service and has warned youths about the pitfalls of guns, drugs, violence. He will need to complete 470 additional hours.