Rapper Young Thug pleads guilty to gang, drug and gun charges in long-running racketeering case

by · TheJournal.ie

RAPPER YOUNG THUG has pleaded guilty to gang, drug and gun charges as part of a long-running criminal racketeering case.

The 33-year-old Grammy-winning artist, whose given name is Jeffery Williams, entered his pleas without reaching a deal with prosecutors after negotiations between the two sides broke down, lead prosecutor Adriane Love said.

Young Thug pleaded guilty to one gang charge, three drug charges and two gun charges.

Shortly after the judge sentenced Williams to a total of 40 years in prison for all six convictions, with a mandatory term of five years.

Taking into account time served, the rapper will walk free from the court today.

Williams will then be placed on probation for 15 years, where he will go back to prison to serve out the remaining 35 year-sentence if he breaches his conditions.

Young Thug also entered a no contest plea to another gang charge and a racketeering conspiracy charge, meaning that he decided not to contest those charges and accepts punishment for them.

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The judge was hearing from Love and from defence lawyer Brian Steel before making a sentencing decision.  A tremendously successful rapper, Young Thug started his own record label, Young Stoner Life or YSL.

Prosecutors have said he also co-founded a violent criminal street gang and that YSL stands for Young Slime Life.

He was charged two years ago in a sprawling indictment accusing him and more than two dozen other people of conspiring to violate Georgia’s anti-racketeering law. He also was charged with gang, drug and gun crimes.

Young Thug’s plea comes nearly a year after the prosecution began presenting evidence in the problem-plagued trial. Jury selection at the courthouse in Atlanta began in January 2023 and took nearly 10 months.

The trial of six defendants began with opening statements last November, and prosecutors since then have called dozens of witnesses.

Three of his co-defendants had already pleaded guilty this week after reaching deals with prosecutors. The pleas leave the fates of two other co-defendants still undecided.

Nine people charged in the indictment accepted plea deals before the trial began. Twelve others are being tried separately.

Prosecutors dropped charges against one defendant after he was convicted of murder in an unrelated case.