 That boy Fetty Wop, man. They done gave that boy Fetty Wop six years in prison. Six years. News you can use, news you can use. Make sure you got like, subscribe to the channel. Make sure you guys tap in, man. Check out what we got going over at Boss Talk 101. Make sure you guys become members of our YouTube channel. Just quickly, we wanna talk about that boy Fetty Wop, man. They done gave that boy Fetty Wop six years in prison. Six years. Fetty Wop, man, he ain't doing it in a minute, but they're using old videos, all kinds of stuff, to sentence him. They gave him six years. He might get out in four to four years if he's good, four to five years, but at any rate, man, they got him. They got him dead to the left on this one. Man, I hate that. I hate to see anybody buying those bars, but they use some of his music, his rap music to convict him. This is something that you guys gotta be careful about, man. Man, that trap queen, that whole situation, they brought all that back up in court as well, saying that he was glamorizing drugs, all kinds of stuff, so you got to be careful, man, when it comes down to what they are saying, what they'll do to get you convicted. I'm telling you right now, man, if you're a brother and you're a rapper, man, know that some of the things you're saying, and you can get with Boosie and all these other ones, and you'll see they'll use this stuff against you as soon as you guys walk into the courtroom, so I'm telling you now, listen to me. They use stuff against you, man. When you say this stuff and it goes out on these internet waves, know that it can and will be used against you. This is public information now that you put it out in this way. I'm telling you now, man, Betty Wop happen to sit down, man. Yeah, I remember he was going with that girl, Alexa, Alexa, but I'm telling you now, man, that's over. He gonna have to figure out something else now because they've sentenced him. He's got the time now to think about it, sit down and think about it. Man, there's a bunch of rappers that they done locked up too. If you ain't dead, they locking you up. They doing rappers as dirty as they can to try to make them stay under their control. They know that the economy and entrepreneurship is something they know that these artists can be a force to be reckoned with if they ever unify, if they ever understand the power of unity. The big boys don't even try to bring them together because they trying to hold a bag together. All I'm telling you is, man, you listen to them and hear me good, man. Betty Wop, he got herself in a situation now, man. Willie Junior, that's his name. I'm telling you now. The prosecutor was ready to get him. They definitely was happy to get him. There's a big fish to them. I guarantee it. They brought everything they could up against this man to make sure that he understood that they were in total control of this whole situation, man. He got in trouble. It was in New York where he was sentenced at. So when you start to look at it, it says, on Wednesday, he appeared before the judge, Joanne Siebert, at the federal court in central Islam, New York, to receive a sentence in one year longer than the minimum. Mr. Maxwell waved to about 20 family members and friends who attended the sentencing and he entered the courtroom wearing a beige jumpsuit. His dreadlocks pulled back from his face. And his lawyer was Elizabeth. He had a Roman lawyer, Macedonio. She argued that Mr. Maxwell had been supporting many relatives and children. They don't care nothing about that at this point. They don't care nothing about that at this point. All they want is a conviction. That prosecutor is not trying to hear none of that. All they want is conviction. Once they got you dead to the left, they take that and run with it. So all that trying to tell him, you know, we'll do better this next time and all that. They don't want to hear none of that. Christopher Caffer on the prosecutor wins. They asked the judge to remember the collateral consequences of drug abuse and pointed out that many people suffered during the pandemic, but they didn't turn to peddling poison. Joanne Siebert called the case one of the most difficult she has had to decide in 30 years on the bench. You believe that? You think she really had time? You think she really was tripping about it? Because I don't think so, man. I said noticing that Mr. Maxwell overcame obstacles to achieve unbelievable fame only to throw it away. Man, they glad they got this boy, man. They know that this boy right here is like getting, it's a trophy to those guys. Once they get, when they got Lil Wayne, when they got Jairu, when they got any of these guys, when they got Pimp C, when they got Scarface for child support, any time they get, they know they're getting a trophy when they got C. Myrna down there. They not tripping about none of that. They don't really care about this man's family like that or they don't care about him feeding it, trying to help his family. They care about the fact that you're a rapper, you had opportunity and you blew it. So now we're gonna make you pay for that. And that's what they're saying. And I can guarantee you, hey, it's not gonna be no easy win for him. You're gonna have to either get him some kind of protective custody, better not be a snitch. They're gonna have paperwork party when you get there. Yeah, but his crime, they say it was serious and his actions while on bail raised serious questions, she said. The thing you cannot escape is that there were other choices she said. In March, one of Mr. Maxwell's co-defendants, Anthony Seath, a former New Jersey correction officer, was sentenced to six years for acting as a courier of cocaine. Maxwell remaining for co-defendants pleaded guilty and awaiting sentences. So they liked him, I might have flipped on him. Somebody might have turned up and flipped on him. We don't know. Something happened here. Somebody probably flipped on him. I'm telling you, man, because it's looking real crazy right here, but they really, they want the big fish. He done been to a few, you know, he was on love at the hip hop of Hollywood. You know, Trap Queen, he had a song. He was the big fish in this. Y'all get in the comments and tell me, y'all don't think he was a big fish and they were happy that they took a rapper off the streets, just as they did ARF. In any one, they can lock up. If you get caught with any situation, gun, anything, they locking you up. And they happy when you're a big fish. If they catch you wrong and you know you're gonna pull me out of here right. Even with Remy Ma, even the females, any time they catch you wrong, they gonna try to make an example out of you as a rapper or artist that they know you had an opportunity at. They know that there's a chance that you could have helped somebody, helped more of your people. So they gonna use that against you. So be ready because they ain't after the play. New York not playing? You running around here thinking they play? Ain't nobody playing. So the prosecutor's right now celebrating. This is a win. They got a conviction out of this. That's what you need to understand. That's the main thing. They got a conviction out of this. They happy about it. I'm telling you right now, if you think they're not happy, go down to your local, wherever the piece of place is, about a DA office in New York. If you can find one of the DAs, you gonna see they're having a good time in the judge's DA and the lawyers that prosecute them probably all eating together. So when you think they with you, a Fatty Wop, they not. So it's a game they playing. You a brother. They know that. I guarantee you in that courtroom you wasn't comfortable. Dreads, one of your eyes missing. You had an accident, you were successful. You had an opportunity and they feel like they won today. So man, hey man, I keep you in my prayers. I'm gonna try to reach out to you like I always do, all the guys who get locked up. I'm gonna try to find out how I can send some money, put it on your book, shout out to Cripp Mack. Shout out, I actually locked out with him when he was locked up and a couple more people I can name but I'm not going to do that. But I'm telling you man, they happy when they locked these people up who had an opportunity to do something to help all mankind, all of our culture. So listen man, let me get out of it man. News you can use man. You've done another great segment man. Hey man, I think that's about it. Man.