Rapper Meek Mill granted new trial on 2008 drugs, weapons convictions
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[July 25, 2019]
By Alex Dobuzinskis
(Reuters) - Meek Mill, a rap artist from
Philadelphia who has become an advocate for reform of the U.S. criminal
justice system, is entitled to a new trial on drugs and weapon charges
that have kept him on probation for a decade, a Pennsylvania appeals
court ruled on Wednesday.
A three-judge Pennsylvania Superior Court panel agreed that Philadelphia
Judge Genece Brinkley, who presided over a 2008 trial that resulted in
his conviction, was no longer impartial, as Meek Mill's attorneys have
argued. It ordered a replacement for Brinkley in the case.
After the sentence, Meek Mill, an African-American whose given name is
Robert Rihmeek Williams, became a cause célèbre for musicians,
celebrities and criminal justice reform campaigners who said his case
was typical of a U.S. legal system that treats minorities unjustly.
The sole witness against Meek Mill at his 2008 trial was a discredited
Philadelphia narcotics squad officer who is no longer with the city's
police force.
"Williams' right to be tried before an impartial judge is necessary in
this case because the trial judge heard highly prejudicial testimony at
the first trial, which was a bench trial, and made credibility
determinations in favor of a now discredited witness and against
Williams," President Judge Jack A. Panella wrote in an 18-page opinion.
In November 2017, Brinkley sentenced the rapper to up to four years in
prison, saying a pair of arrests violated probation conditions she set
following his 2008 convictions. He served five months before the state's
top court granted him bail.
Neither of the arrests, including one that according to local media
stemmed from a dirt bike stunt in New York, resulted in convictions.
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Rapper Meek Mill departs after lawyers from both sides made a brief
statement to the judge in a retrial hearing in court in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. July 16, 2019. REUTERS/Bastiaan
Slabbers
"The past 11 years have been mentally and emotionally challenging,
but I'm glad that justice prevailed and my clean record has been
restored," Mill said on Twitter.
The Philadelphia District Attorney's Office said in a statement it
welcomed the appeals court decision and was reviewing its options
regarding a new trial.
Chuck Peruto, an attorney for Judge Brinkley, said it was unusual
for the district attorney to agree that a defendant deserves a new
trial. Brinkley stands by her handling of the case.
"Basically, she's a tough judge and any defendant would want a judge
other than Brinkley to hear their case," Peruto said by phone.
Mill's song "Going Bad," on which he collaborated with Drake, hit
No. 6 on the U.S. charts this year. His other hit songs include "All
Eyes on You," and "Dangerous."
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; editing by Steve
Orlofsky and G Crosse)
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