• @[email protected]OP
    link
    fedilink
    English
    533 months ago

    But the artist known as BG must provide the government with copies of any songs he writes moving forward, ahead of their production or promotion – and, if they are deemed to be inconsistent with his goals of rehabilitation, prosecutors could move to toughen the terms governing his supervised release.

    • @Pronell
      link
      English
      773 months ago

      If he wants supervised early release from prison, this doesn’t seem terribly out of line.

      It’s not like this is a part of his sentence, it’s a part of him trying to reduce his sentence.

        • @[email protected]OP
          link
          fedilink
          English
          11
          edit-2
          3 months ago

          Ultimately the headline is true, and using probation as cover to undermine the document that gives them power meanwhile having rich white men disregard the same set of laws in the face of a judge with no punishment makes me wonder what you are on about here.

          BG has lost freedom of speech while Trump claimed his free speech was lost for not being jailed for contempt of court.

          Other judges in the US literally use electric shocks to stop such outbursts as Trump made in court.

          ALL THE TIME.

          This isn’t “laws for thee” this is straight up “torture for thee”.

          • @Ledivin
            link
            English
            63 months ago

            Just to be clear, your response to seeing rich people evade justice is that… nobody should have consequences anymore?

            You must get really angry at people who use food stamps instead of at people like the Waltons, don’t you?

          • @[email protected]OP
            link
            fedilink
            English
            13 months ago

            Defendants have a constitutional right to be present at all critical stages of their trial. The Marshall Project reports, however, that some defendants have been too scared to return to the courtroom after being shocked or have missed participating in their trial while recovering from being shocked.

      • rand_alpha19
        link
        fedilink
        83 months ago

        Not really, this is basically punishing him for the thoughtcrime of talking about using guns.

        They also ordered him to do 400 hours of community service, I guess for the “trouble” of having a hearing. If his songs are too spicy, they can revoke his right to supervised release (AKA send him back to prison).

        How many times have you heard of a situation where there’s a man threatening to kill his girlfriend and the cops do nothing? Let the man write his lyrics, he was put in prison for illegal gun possession resulting from a traffic stop - he didn’t fucking kill anyone.

        • @Pronell
          link
          English
          33 months ago

          If he wants special treatment to get out of his sentence early, he has to comply with that program.

          We can’t really be arguing about the validity of the charges here, this isn’t a venue where that is entertained but one where the sentence is amended under certain restrictions.

          • rand_alpha19
            link
            fedilink
            143 months ago

            I feel like the charges are important to note, especially given that the prosecutor wanted 25 years for this offence and that black Americans are handed very harsh sentences compared to white offenders.

            It really does seem like black Americans and rappers are treated with a different set of standards and government data back me up on that.

            https://www.ussc.gov/research/research-reports/mandatory-minimum-penalties-firearms-offenses-federal-system

            Black offenders also generally received longer average sentences for firearms offenses carrying a mandatory minimum penalty than any other racial group. In fiscal year 2016, Black offenders convicted under section 924© received an average sentence of 165 months, compared to 140 months for White offenders and 130 months for Hispanic offenders. Only Other Race offenders received longer average sentences (170 months), but they accounted for only 2.2 percent of section 924© offenders.

            • @Pronell
              link
              English
              33 months ago

              Totally agreed. Sentencing is insane and discretion was taken away from judges by congress long ago.

              I’m more pointing out where he is within that system that arguing for reform. I’m not against said reform, but it’s a totally different topic.

      • @Cosmonauticus
        link
        English
        33 months ago

        How is that not punishment for speech? If this is the new standard you could send ppl on probation back to prison for anything the court deams negative

        • @Pronell
          link
          English
          93 months ago

          There’s no punishment, they’re telling him that if he wants early release and intends to perform, that the content of his performance be reviewed ahead of time.

          Because he would never have been able to have that performance AT ALL if still incarcerated.

          He is asking for early release and it is being granted with certain restrictions.

          People on probation get sent back when they break laws, violating the terms of that probation. This guy hasn’t gotten to probation yet and is more restricted.

          I see your point though, and it would be double jeopardy if they fully released him while continuing to punish him in other ways. That just isn’t what’s happening here. He’s trying to get out early.

          • @Cosmonauticus
            link
            English
            33 months ago

            Personally I dont see the difference. (I do see the difference between probation and supervised release now). It essentially claims a prisoner (incarcerated or on supervised release) has no freedom of speech.

            • FuglyDuck
              link
              English
              3
              edit-2
              3 months ago

              Right or wrong, the whole point of incarceration is removing freedoms as punitive punishment for committing crimes.

              Probation, supervised release, it’s not the same as having served the sentence (and therefore gaining most rights back,). For example, a pedophile is probably going to never be allowed to work around kids and doing so on probation or sup. release is going to see them sent back into jail.

              • @Cosmonauticus
                link
                English
                03 months ago

                It’s wrong. Incarceration doesn’t mean you lose your citizenship and citizens of the US are still entitled to basic rights such as speech. Prisoners supposedly have rights that protect them from the state.

                We should all be more upset about this

                • FuglyDuck
                  link
                  English
                  2
                  edit-2
                  3 months ago

                  Prisoners have rights? As the last constitutionally protected form of slaves?

                  And yes. It’s wrong.

                  I just think if we solve the larger problem this won’t be an issue.

                • Carighan Maconar
                  link
                  English
                  13 months ago

                  You do realize though that freedom of speech does not mean freedom to say whatever you want, yes?

        • @11111one11111
          link
          English
          13 months ago

          Red flag laws maybe? Most of them are very new and obscurly written. I’m just guessing tho.

  • @rockSlayer
    link
    English
    483 months ago

    I hope he takes a hard turn into political rap about the prison industrial complex

  • @Lost_My_Mind
    link
    English
    173 months ago

    Does the government know what the Streisand effect is?

  • @solrize
    link
    English
    133 months ago

    This seems to give him some pretty good trolling opportunities.

  • @metaphortune
    link
    English
    73 months ago

    I read this article and my main takeaway was: that Bling Bling song sucks.

  • @then_three_more
    link
    English
    13 months ago

    with federal authorities’ obligation to enforce the supervised prison release plan which he accepted.

    So does this mean he previously wavered his right to free speech when it comes to stuff related to this?

  • THCDenton
    link
    English
    -33 months ago

    Man fuck judges

    • @YarHarSuperstar
      link
      English
      143 months ago

      You know it’s a link right? And that there’s an article behind it?

      • sunzu
        link
        fedilink
        -173 months ago

        i don’t feed fake news, asking for people who already gave that rag a click for the team.

        • @Donkter
          link
          English
          83 months ago

          Why would you trust someone summarizing a rag you think is fake news?

          • sunzu
            link
            fedilink
            -10
            edit-2
            3 months ago

            Facts are facts… The spin is what makes it fake

        • Match!!
          link
          fedilink
          English
          33 months ago

          You could find another news source reporting on this