 Absolutely. Yeah, let me ask you a question. What was that feeling, man? Cause there's a lot of young cats out here to think the street life is all that. I remember everybody seen it when you was walking the court when you was a young cat, you going in there, you and Shilganem. What was that feeling, man? Cause you described that feeling to these young cats. It wasn't, it wasn't nice. It wasn't, when you fighting for your life, when you fighting a murder case and you entered judicial system, first of all, you, the system designed to beat you anyway. So if you're going there, you know, with a 187, most likely you're going to lose. So my heart was, was beating every day. I didn't know what to expect. I didn't know how to carry myself. I didn't know how to act because I wasn't ever in a position like that. Normally when I went to court, I would just take a deal. You know what I'm saying? Cause I didn't have money for a lawyer. I didn't have. Yeah, that was me. I was dead. Right. So nigga didn't have none of that. So this is the first time I ever had a lawyer or I ever had somebody speak for me to where I couldn't say nothing. I couldn't do nothing. I had to let the lawyer speak and just sit in court and just be on my best behavior. But at the same time, it was shit happening outside of the court that was still going down. That was, you know, prohibiting me from moving. I had to be on house arrest. I had to, couldn't move certain ways, couldn't do certain things, but it, it taught me discipline. You know what I'm saying? The real crazy way it taught me discipline because everybody around me was running wild. And I was the only one that couldn't. Let me ask you a question. Shug Knight, did that man change your life forever? He changed my life forever. Shug Knight was one of the best niggas that I ever ran across in my life. For the simple fact that he was so honest, so real, so true, and so passionate about death rowing, about his orders and about us becoming who we are. And, you know, I like to reflect on the great shit that he did. You know, everybody know about the bad shit, but the great shit he did was he instilled in me the power and the will to just be great and just to stand on top of it and not to be second place, but be first place. And, you know, when you got somebody like that, before he became the mogul that y'all seen, behind the scenes, we seen that mogul. We seen him, you know, giving us information, direction, you know, coaching us. Like even when it came to my murder case, if it wasn't for him, I don't know what I would have did because he was professional enough to know that you need a lawyer. We got to get a defense team. We got to do this. Don't say a word. How much is your lawyer cost? Man, we spent about $10 million on that case. Damn, just to get you out. He spent 10 million cash. At least because the case went on for three years. And y'all had the best lawyer you could get. We had David Kenner and then he brought in Johnny Cochran and then he brought in Donald Ray and then they brought in another attorney. It was like, I had like five or six attorneys on it. They had a detective, a pathologist, a DNA video, like every level of the game, it was like, this was the first time that video reenactments was introduced in court. So we had to reenact what had actually happened through a video that my attorney was willing to, had, you know, found a way to put together. So it was like a reenactment. Like you see now when you watch those shows, the first 48 and all that shit, you see them, honey. We was the first ones to do that in court. And that shit was because the money we were spending in this lawyer was so sharp. He was like, I got to let people see because the way they see you, they see you as just a gangbanger that did a drive-by. So we got to show them exactly what happened so they can be inside the seat and see exactly what took place. Let me ask you this. Sure, you still talk to Sure? Yeah, I spoke with him about two months ago. How you doing? He doing good. He doing better than he was before. He's got a good spirit and I just wanted to communicate with him just to keep the love and let him know that I'm gonna keep his spirit alive. And if, you know, the grace of God, if death row happens to get, you know, dropped in my hands or open back up again, I'll be willing to keep the spirit of it alive and just do my thing. That's why I'm representing, you know what I'm saying, for the spirit of because I remember that's my birthplace. That's my start. That's my ecosystem. That was one of the first people to believe in you. Exactly. You better know it. See ya.