 took a three key, how much did they charge him with? Oh, they charged him with like a, they didn't even charge him with the whole key. The people thought that beat him out they dope. Cause he was like, oh yo, um, I think it was like a key and a half. They only, they gave him 15 years though. Probation or dead? No, he ain't. So he went to the prison. Yes. 15 years. And my mom divorced him because she said, you love her more than you love me. Yeah, we on boss talk one on one. Yeah, we gonna talk. So I got the, I got the busted before I got the indictment. Okay, so that's when he found out for the first time what you were doing or he knew? Well, he didn't really, I think he knew, but he didn't want to know my mama like never, in both of them are deceased, but my mama never gave me like the benefit of the doubt. Like she already knew Chuck, I was doing something. And my sister was a mama's girl, but my dad was, I was a daddy's girl. So about a time I got 19, I'm pregnant with my son. I'd already had my oldest daughter at 16 going on 17. And so the people come to, they come to set me up for five ounces. Yeah. But I got all this stuff in my dad's house. I always thought I was slick. You know, my brother called me slick. None of my, there are a lot of people call me Chuck and some people call me slick. So I always thought I had more sense than everybody, right? So I put the drugs in my daddy car cause I'm like, he the preacher. So if the police come, they not gonna search the preacher car because he's the preacher. I was crazy. I was a silly sinner. Just thinking I could sell drugs, money through Saturday and as long as I respected the Sabbath day, I would never go to prison. I'm telling you this what I thought mama. And that's what you thought. My whole life. Yeah. That whole time like I would, you couldn't call me for nothing on Sunday. I wouldn't do nothing on Sunday. 12 o'clock midnight Saturday, I'm back in the house. If my curfew was teen, I was back in and I was 18. And every time whenever you're doing what you're doing during the week and you knew that it was wrong, you'd go in and repent. And repent. And I would come out the window as soon as they go to sleep and leave the window cracked and climb back in and when they go back before they get up for work. So when you was doing this and you get the indictment or you get busted, where is this guy at? Is he taking care of business? Would you make him show you good? Well, no, I was done with him by the end. I'm dealing with him. You got to straight up connect with somebody. But why LA? Because we had it down here. But they would come in and they would give me better prices and then I had some people. You didn't have no connect down here. And I had a connecting Houston and I was doing both of them at the same time. Of course, yeah. And that's where it'd be, but yeah. So I'm driving back and forth to Houston and then when they ain't got nothing that I'm doing something else. So, you know, and they got me messed up a couple of times, you know what I'm saying? So long story short, my dad goes to take my mom to work. And by the time he come back, the fast, I mean the task force was already. At a house? No, they already had set up a plan to catch me that day. I was nine months pregnant, seven months pregnant with my son. They've been watching because you they've been watching. Because I'm terrible. I was terrible. So they come in where the guy comes in first and not going to go like, yo, check on. I want the five ounces. So I'm like, OK, I'm pregnant. And I'm like, when I get to the door with him, he was like, oh, that's all right, change my mind. That don't sound right. It didn't make sense to me. So he's like, yo, I'm so and so around the corner so I can get them for 35 and get five for 35. I'm like, but you've been getting them for me for a grain of pop. So OK, well, go get them from him. I ain't got time for that. I'm already pregnant, miserable. I had just got back from Houston. I'm hot. You know what I'm saying? I ain't got time for that. Go OK, bye. Then about 30 minutes later, he come back. He not going to do it. Yo, I changed my mind. He was just giving the people time to get there. I didn't know that at the time. By this time, my dad's pulling up in the yard from taking my mom to work. So when he comes in the yard, he parking the car in the driveway was like behind it. You know, the old houses like down the driveway. Yeah, yeah. But the people coming through the front door and when they come in the door, they just get him out the car and bring him in the house. And he just looked at me. He had tears in his eyes and he was like. So the police brought him in. How did you feel? I wanted to die. Like this man don't see no wrong in me. None whatsoever. And now I'm thinking like they not going to find the three keys in the trunk. And then I got 18 ounces of powder in them. So you got three keys in the trunk. In his trunk. Three key loads. I already cooked. I already cooked. Out of order. And then. Why would you do it in the house? Because normally. They would already cook when I got there. Yeah. But why would you even have the drugs at your house and not somewhere else? Because I was at my dad's house. She's just a preacher. So I'm thinking like they not going to ever come to here. Yeah, OK, got you. So I thought I was out slicking them or whatever. Three keys of cocaine in the trunk. And the five ounces. And the five ounces. And then I had $3,000 worth of $20 rocks. Yeah, did you have any cash on you? I didn't have no cash on me. No cash? I had just gold. No guns. No guns. OK. Wow. And that's the crazy part because that's the way it be. Like you more and you was she was more happy in the end too. If the laws hadn't came because she has gold and she was comfortable with the dope that she had. Man, she was happy. You know what I'm saying? Because you knew you had you knew you had control. You knew you had power. And so my dad comes in and they put him on his knees. And I'm sitting on the couch because I'm big and pregnant or whatever. And so he just looked at me and they were about they were about to leave without the three keys. They were just going to leave with the five ounces and the $3,000 worth of rocks. And this one man just come like out of nowhere like he was from Bolivia. So why are you amending? What you doing way down looking for me? And what do you say? He said we didn't search the cars. My daddy said with your car keys that I had a Z 28. I rock at the time. That's what we were talking about. Hawaiian blue, Hawaiian blue. My dad is like with your keys. Give them the keys. He's just looking at me. I'm like, don't give them your keys. Yeah. You like give them my. Don't give but he don't know because he had his car down here. Dripping my mama car. So his car was still just sitting there. Yeah, it was a river ever. So his car was there. But he had taken my mom to work in the other car. So when they searched the car and they came in there, that man was like, because let me tell you something crazy. The whole time they thought Chuck, it was a boy because my nickname is Nickname. Who gave you that name? My daddy when I was born. OK, well, I was chunky because he wanted me to be a boy. And I wasn't a boy. So he just started calling me chucking. I just still ended up being leticia from my mom. But so three keys in his trunk. So he was just looked at me and he looked at the people and so they take they handcuffed both of us, of course, and they take us down. And he just like when we get in the little room, he was like, I'm just going to take the charge. They'll give me probation. That's what he told you. And I say he said, because I don't ever want you exposed to prison life. You got too much talent. You got too many gifts. I can't read music. I play all this stuff by ear. I write songs by member. I mean, I just make a study. Give me a name. I can write a song in two minutes. So God has given me all these talents and I took the hands that he blessed me with and just destroy people's lives. And it's just the truth. That's what's really took a three key. How much did they charge him with? Oh, they charged him with like a. They didn't even charge him with the whole key. The people thought I'd beat him out. They don't because he was like, oh, yo, um, I think it was like a kid and a half. They only they gave him 15 years, though. Probation or no, he and so he went to the prison. Yes. 15 years. And my mom divorced him because she said, you love her more than you love me. Wow. So 15 years he had to do behind the three key. Well, he did. Eight or almost nine nine years. How did you feel when you heard that? I wanted to die. I was like, oh, no, y'all cannot do this. And you didn't try to come in like it's mine. Yes, I told him that he was like, they not going to do that. Chuck, you just acting stupid right now. Like, don't be stupid. Just I'm going to do it because at this time in the prison, the state, they even sent him to the vet. They sent him to the state. So they could, his church members could go and they would pack a picnic baskets and make him sweet potato pies. And that was his favorite. They could go there and take their stuff on Saturdays in him, like little picnics. So they didn't turn their back on him. Yeah. What you know, people, they didn't turn their back on him at all. What unit was it? Um, Winfield, Louisiana. Winfield, Louisiana. Yeah. And he was he just went near the time. And he got and he got out of here dying.