Rapper Facing Life In Prison for Mixtape Cover

john hancock

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Brandon Duncan a.k.a Tiny Doo, 33 years old, father of six kids...prosecutors are making an example out of Tiny Doo through a law called Proposition 21 which considered gang conspiracy anything that  “promotes, furthers, assists, or benefits” from gang activity. They're coming for Game, TDE, and Nipsey this year, the way I see it. This law is a new tactic to gain access into the infrastructure of these rappers' organization. 


...2016 y'all, it's going down, after 8 years under Obama, and 3 years of  ratchet Miley Cyrus Pied Piper'ing the kiddies into the ghetto, they're striking down with vengeance. Mark my words, this is just the beginning. All them Navy Seals coming home from the war gonna be cops. Ferguson EVERYWHERE.


This is crazy... a MIXTAPE COVER, and dude had no PRIORS. NONE!
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could have posted an actual article 
[h1]Calif. prosecutors try using obscure law to send musician to prison for life over rap album[/h1]
DAVID EDWARDS
20 NOV 2014 AT 09:10 ET                    

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Rapper Brandon Duncan, better known as Tiny Doo, faces life in prison (KGTV)

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A California rapper is facing life in prison because prosecutors have charged him under a little-known law, claiming that his album sales benefited from gang murders.

Rapper Brandon Duncan, who goes by the name Tiny Doo, and 14 other gang members were arrested last week on charges relating to an alleged gang conspiracy in 9 shootings in the San Diego area, KGTV reported.

Although Duncan is not directly tied to the shootings, prosecutors for the first time have employed an obscure California law passed in 2000 that allows gang members to be prosecuted if they benefited from the crimes of other gang members. And according to prosecutors, Duncan’s album sales were boosted by the shootings.

“We’re not just talking about a CD of anything, of love songs. We’re talking about a CD (cover) … there is a revolver with bullets,” Deputy District Attorney Anthony Campagnatold KGTV.

Duncan’s attorney, however, suggested that the first use of this California law could be a “huge” violation of the U.S. Constitution.

“It’s shocking,” attorney Brian Watkins pointed out. “He has no criminal record. Nothing in his lyrics say go out and commit a crime. Nothing in his lyrics reference these shootings, yet they are holding him liable for conspiracy. There are huge constitutional issues.”

Thomas Jefferson School of Law professor Alex Kreit agreed that the law may run afoul of the First Amendment.

“Where does that end if that’s the definition of criminal liability? Is Martin Scorsese going to be prosecuted if he meets with mafia members for a movie for his next film?” Kreit asked. “The Constitution says it can’t be a crime to simply make gangster rap songs and hang out with people that are committing crimes. You have to have more involvement than that.”

Watch the video below from KGTV, broadcast Nov. 18, 2014.
 
Idk much about Cali laws but If that's all they got on him, it's no way they prosecute this dude...lol is this a joke? Locking ****** up by association now?
 
Bunch of BS, my boy back home that is close to Doo is trying hard to fight this, his brother is locked up for the same thing.
 
He's gonna get off, but the fact that they're wasting his time with this nonsense is infuriating
 
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