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Tekashi arrested by the Feds on RICO charges

Tekashi 6ix9ine has at least one legal woe off his plate -- his mall attack case out of Houston has been tossed out ... and the reasons for doing so are interesting.

The State of Texas formally requested to have Tekashi's assault charges stemming from an alleged 2018 altercation completely dismissed, and a judge signed off on it Monday.

As for why it got tossed -- first, the state says the complaining witness -- or the alleged victim in this case -- requested it be so ... which we already knew. The kid who allegedly got choked out by Tekashi later showed up to one of the rapper's court hearings in the matter and posed with him.




You'll recall ... the whole thing started over the kid, Santiago Albarran, recording Tekashi against his wishes, which allegedly resulted in Tekashi putting his hands around SA's throat.

At the hearing, Santiago told Tekashi's attorney that he wanted to drop the charges, and also apparently said he'd expressed that to the prosecution too. Looks like they listened.



Tekashi's attorney, Carl A. Moore, tells TMZ, "“Mr. Hernandez has not been notified yet of the dismissal. We plan to notify him today. I am happy the prosecutors handling this case did what was fair and just today in Dismissing the charge against Mr. Hernandez. We hope that getting this case behind him will assist in him moving forward with his career.”

There's one more reason the state cited for wanting the case dismissed ... prosecutors say moving Tekashi to Texas is a "security risk" now that he's cooperated with the feds in NYC. Of course, they're referring to Tekashi69's snitching ... in which he testified against alleged former associates.

Tekashi hasn't been sentenced in his racketeering case, but the hope is the feds will cut him a break now that he's been singing for them from the canary cage and helped them score convictions against others.


 
Tekashi 6ix9ine has at least one legal woe off his plate -- his mall attack case out of Houston has been tossed out ... and the reasons for doing so are interesting.

The State of Texas formally requested to have Tekashi's assault charges stemming from an alleged 2018 altercation completely dismissed, and a judge signed off on it Monday.

As for why it got tossed -- first, the state says the complaining witness -- or the alleged victim in this case -- requested it be so ... which we already knew. The kid who allegedly got choked out by Tekashi later showed up to one of the rapper's court hearings in the matter and posed with him.




You'll recall ... the whole thing started over the kid, Santiago Albarran, recording Tekashi against his wishes, which allegedly resulted in Tekashi putting his hands around SA's throat.

At the hearing, Santiago told Tekashi's attorney that he wanted to drop the charges, and also apparently said he'd expressed that to the prosecution too. Looks like they listened.



Tekashi's attorney, Carl A. Moore, tells TMZ, "“Mr. Hernandez has not been notified yet of the dismissal. We plan to notify him today. I am happy the prosecutors handling this case did what was fair and just today in Dismissing the charge against Mr. Hernandez. We hope that getting this case behind him will assist in him moving forward with his career.”

There's one more reason the state cited for wanting the case dismissed ... prosecutors say moving Tekashi to Texas is a "security risk" now that he's cooperated with the feds in NYC. Of course, they're referring to Tekashi69's snitching ... in which he testified against alleged former associates.

Tekashi hasn't been sentenced in his racketeering case, but the hope is the feds will cut him a break now that he's been singing for them from the canary cage and helped them score convictions against others.


I would assume every charge he has will be taken care of, if he didn't have that in his plea then he's dumb as hell
 
That's how I feel about 2Pac. He had so much opportunity as a rapper and an actor. But he threw it all away when he jumped ship and went over to Death Row.

fixed that for you.

I genuinely believe had Pac not gone over to Death Row he'd still be alive today.
 
Well either way he would have went back to prison.

If he went to Death Row and jumped Orlando Anderson and lived, he would have gone back to prison for violating the terms of his bail.

If Suge Knight didn't bail him out and he stayed in prison he wouldn't have gotten out for several years.

Either way he ends up dead or in prison.
 
Well either way he would have went back to prison.

If he went to Death Row and jumped Orlando Anderson and lived, he would have gone back to prison for violating the terms of his bail.

If Suge Knight didn't bail him out and he stayed in prison he wouldn't have gotten out for several years.

Either way he ends up dead or in prison.

but in prison, he comes out with a stack of rhyme books and a whole new perspective on life. He got 4.5 years and a lot can change in a man in that period of time so him only writing one song while he was locked up the first time could have turned into a shitload of songs out of boredom if anything.

Getting out in '99 means a good chance he would go on to record a magnum opus that exceeds Me Against The World in every way possible.
 

Tekashi69 Is Praised by Prosecutors, Who Urge a Lenient Sentence


The rapper Tekashi69 was a star government witness at the trial of two men who were accused of being members of his former crew, the Nine Trey Gangsta Bloods, and who were ultimately convicted on racketeering conspiracy charges.

Now, federal prosecutors are repaying the favor for what they say was the “extraordinary” cooperation that Tekashi69 — who was born Daniel Hernandez and is also known as 6ix9ine — provided against his former associates.

In a memo filed late Wednesday, prosecutors asked the judge who is set to sentence Mr. Hernandez on Dec. 18 to show him leniency for assistance that they described as “both incredibly significant and extremely useful.”

Mr. Hernandez, the memo said, provided “an insider’s view of Nine Trey and a firsthand account of many acts of violence” that the government did not otherwise have. And he put himself and his family in harm’s way to do so, the memo said.


The prosecutors did not specify what sentence they believed Mr. Hernandez, 23, should receive, nor did they argue that he should be spared prison entirely.

But their lavish praise and detailed account of his cooperation suggested that they would seek a lenient sentence, if he is required to spend any time in prison at all.

As much credit as Mr. Hernandez’s cooperation won him from prosecutors, his September stint as a government witness in Federal District Court in Manhattan led hip-hop fans and other rappers to call him a turncoat, a snitch and a fraud.

The trial put the platinum-selling Mr. Hernandez — a polarizing and combustible figure whose meteoric career was fueled in part by a viral presence on Instagram — in an unlikely role: testifying against the same gang that had enhanced his street credibility.

Over more than two days of testimony, Mr. Hernandez broke an unspoken code of silence to link the two men on trial, Anthony Ellison and Aljermiah Mack, to what he called “robberies, assaults, drugs, stuff of that nature.”

Lawyers for the two men sought to undermine Mr. Hernandez’s testimony by calling him a liar who hoped to avoid a long prison term for himself.

“You don’t think he would do whatever he needs to do to go home?” Deveraux L. Cannick, Mr. Ellison’s lawyer, told jurors during closing arguments. “There’s a motive to lie here.”
Mr. Hernandez’s lawyer, Dawn M. Florio, declined to comment on Wednesday.

In the prosecution’s new court filing, the office of Geoffrey S. Berman, the United States attorney for the Southern District of New York, said that Mr. Hernandez had been truthful from the beginning of his cooperation, and that his information was corroborated by other evidence developed independently by the government.

Federal law enforcement authorities first approached Mr. Hernandez on Nov. 17, 2018, prosecutors said in the memo. In a meeting with prosecutors and his lawyer, he was warned of threats against him that had been intercepted on a wiretap of a cellphone belonging to a high-ranking member of the Nine Trey crew, the memo said.

Mr. Hernandez, who grew up in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn, ultimately declined a government offer of protection, but he provided some information about Nine Trey, the prosecutors wrote.

Mr. Hernandez was arrested the next day, and the following morning, he again met with prosecutors, admitting to his involvement in the gang and to his role in an armed robbery for which he had been charged, the memo said.

Mr. Hernandez provided the government with information over the course of seven sessions with prosecutors through Jan. 23, when he pleaded guilty to racketeering conspiracy and other charges, the government said. The guilty plea was initially kept secret while the investigation continued.


At the time of Mr. Hernandez’s plea, a prosecutor, Michael D. Longyear, said in court that the charges carried a sentence of at least 47 years. But Mr. Longyear added that if Mr. Hernandez cooperated successfully, the government would ask the judge, Paul A. Engelmayer, for a sentence below any minimum term.

In their memo, prosecutors said that Mr. Hernandez’s cooperation came at “great risk to his and his family’s safety, in ways far more significant than in other cases.”

They said Nine Trey was “one of the most violent sets of the United Bloods Nation, claiming members throughout the country,” and that before Mr. Hernandez’s cooperation became public, he had relocated his family.

“There is no question that the defendant’s life will never be the same because of his cooperation in this case,” the prosecutors wrote.

Based in part on his information, the prosecutors said that they were able to charge additional defendants and additional crimes.

“Hernandez provided the government with critical insight into the structure and organization of Nine Trey, identified the gang’s key players, and described acts of violence that he personally witnessed or that he heard about from other Nine Trey members,” the government wrote.

After Mr. Hernandez’s cooperation became public in February, the prosecutors added, several of his co-defendants contacted the government to begin plea discussions.
 
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Spineless internet weirdos really love this nigga because of his troll king antics shit is disgusting 69 is really some type of rat hero to some of these people look at how they attack fat Joe speaking facts on this idiot situation cornball ass dude really tried to use 69 sells aka inflated streams to shit on Joe... How sold plat and gold albums before streaming shit crazy I find myself always defending Joe he's really a undervalued legend in the game
 
Ion think they're weirdos, they just didnt grow up in and dont care about the streets. More than likely see people who hate six nine as weirdos for caring about a kid snitching on a bunch of cats that was pumping poison in their own neighborhood.
 
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