
A judge appears likely
to send rapper Meek Mill back behind bars early next year for a steady stream
of probation violations, most involving his failure to keep the court aware of
his erratic travels.
Mill offered emotional
testimony Thursday about his rudderless childhood in gritty North Philadelphia,
while girlfriend Nicki Minaj and various managers pledged to keep him on track.
But Common Pleas Judge
Genece Brinkley, who had spared him state prison in a 2009 drug and gun case,
had heard it all before.
"How many times am
I supposed to give him a second chance?" she asked, concluding that
probation may no longer be "appropriate." She ordered him not to work
or perform before the Feb. 5 sentencing.
A jail term would
presumably stall his career following a year in which the Roc Nation-signed
talent has performed with Minaj, Jay-Z and other industry A-listers, and issued
his second studio album, "Dreams Worth More than Money."
Mill served short
stints in jail and home confinement following his conviction, when he could
have gotten five to 10 years in prison.
"The chance you
gave me definitely changed my life and changed my family's life," Mill
testified Thursday, explaining that he supports his mother, extended family and
4-year-old son. "If you didn't give me a chance, I probably wouldn't be at
this place I'm at now."
Mill, born Robert
Williams, lost his father to violence when he was 5 and left school in the
tenth grade. The 28-year-old now dates one of the most famous women in
entertainment.
"He doesn't have a
lot of structure. He can be irresponsible," Minaj, 33, testified last
week. "Since I've come in his life, I think I've been working on that a
little bit. ... He's just getting accustomed to being an adult."
He said he has dropped
old friends from his entourage to focus on his family and girlfriend. His
lawyer said he and Nicki Minaj were seriously discussing marriage.
The lawyer blamed the
problems on the chaos of the music industry. The latest rules required Mill to
get travel vouchers before he leaves town and meet with his probation officer
in Philadelphia every 60 days.
"He's not a person
who knows how to keep schedules. He's not an accountant. He's an artist,"
argued his latest lawyer, Frank DeSimone. "And those people are
notoriously slipshod (at organization)."
The violations include Meek Mill's performances at a New York benefit concert last month and, according to
prosecutors, efforts to meet up in various cities with Minaj. Brinkley also
raised questions about a suspicious sample during a drug test. Mill denied
trying to thwart the test or taking any drugs. He also dissed the case
prosecutor in a rap song, a decision he now calls "immature."
Mill told the judge he
was so concerned about the rules that he missed being at his mother's bedside
after a recent surgery in New Jersey. The state, Brinkley explained, was
keeping supervised felons out that day amid heightened security for the Miss
America pageant.
"This court has
done nothing but try to help the defendant," she said.
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