In 2005, when he was 18 Meek Mill was arrested for illegally possesing a firearm, dealing drugs, and assaulting a police officer.
To shed a little light on Meek Mill's situation, let us examine his criminal history. Now because a Pennsylvania judge tired of this has-been rappers revolving door love affair with the courts and sentenced Meek Mill to a sentence of two to four years for once again violating his parole when he assaulted two pedestrians at a St Louis, Missouri airport and pissed dirty after a court required drug test, the law has all of a sudden become Heavy handed and unfair as it didn't show him the favoritism he had become used to, having spent 8 years on a 5 year parole sentence because he couldn't escape new charges, parole violations or what Mill calls, "Just part of being human".ģ seconds after Meek Mill's prison door was shut and he was locked in with two known man rapistsįollowing the tried and true tactic that comes with being black, Meek Mill is trying to argue that he is such a fine and upstanding citizen and it is only because he is black and a vendetta stemming from Pennsylvania judge Genece Brinkley ( also black) that he is being sent to prison unfairly. Because he has enough money to pay for decent legal representation and has just enough of a name to have social media assault The Pennsylvania Governor's Office with requests for leniancy and favoritism everytime he has violated parole, Meek Mill has been able to avoid any real prison time. Meek Mill Power Word Robert Rihmeek Williams, born, is another one of your run of the mill black performer/rapper that hasn't had a hit since 2012 but like all East Coast, Philadelphia-born, has-been rappers he thinks that he's the voice for his people and speaks out of his privilege how justice and law favors the white man but chooses to remain oblivious to the fact that he is one of its favored sons as he has been able to avoid prison for violating parole 5 times for his original 2008 conviction for drug dealing, illegally possessing a firearm and assaulting a police officer violations that would have the average person, black or white, facing a lengthy prison sentence.