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Bobby Shmurda Discuses His Case

Bobby Shmurda Discuses His Case
Date Posted: Sunday, October 25th, 2015
Rapper Bobby Shmurda recently called in to New York’s Hot 97 radio to update fans on his on-going bail situation.

He told host Ebro that, unfortunately for him, the court will not accept a partial payment or any collateral for his bail.

“They want 100 percent,” Shmurda says. “They don’t want 25 percent. They don’t want 40 percent. They don’t want 50. They want the whole $2 million.”

Shmurda, born Ackquille Jean Pollard, was arrested in December along with members of his GS9 crew, and hit with a litany of charges including conspiracy to commit second degree murder and conspiracy to commit second degree assault.

At the time of his arrest, Shmurda was one of the hottest rappers in the country and prepping his debut project after his song “Hot N—a” went viral and became a hit. L.A. Reid, CEO of Shmurda’s label home Epic Records, spoke early this month on why the label didn’t post bail for the 21-year-old artist, as many believed they would.

“People don’t know anything about my business, right?” L.A. Reid said during a podcast with Rap Radar. “It’s really not their business. That’s the truth about it, right? We’re not elected officials here. And we’re not at liberty to disclose how we do business. It’s fair practice, I can tell you that. But, it’s not the industry that it once was. We seriously don’t make the money we used to make. That’s a fact of life, right?”

Shmurda said he hasn’t had contact with anyone from the label “in a long time,” but his mother, who sat in on the call, said she’s been in contact with label officals though not much has come of it.

“They’re at the same stage that we’re at from the beginning,” she says. “Epic doesn’t have the power to sign for that much.”

Despite being locked up for the foreseeable future, Shmurda wanted to share a message with listeners and impressionable kids about his music. The Brooklyn rapper emphasized knowing the difference between entertainment and real life.

“My music is not for nobody to go react or something,” he said. “This is something that I’ve been through. This is where I come from. A lot of people don’t come from where I come from, but a lot do. The people that do come from where I come from, it don’t make it right to the things I talk about, to go outside and do it. It’s ok to be out there in the club be dancing, be having fun, but that’s about it. Don’t take it farther than the club. Right now, these people in New York, they not playing with us right now.”

Source: rollingout.com

Date Posted: Sunday, October 25th, 2015 , Total Page Views: 1893

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