Hip Hop Uncensored Podcast artwork

Trick Daddy RESPONDS TO Being Roasted Over His Mug Shot! Jay-Z & Yo Gotti File Lawsuit Against Mississippi Prison System & More!

Hip Hop Uncensored Podcast

English - January 15, 2020 15:13 - 43 minutes - ★★★★★ - 182 ratings
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Rappers Jay-Z and Yo Gotti helped more than two dozen Mississippi inmates file a lawsuit claiming people are dying because the state "has failed to fund its prisons."
Yo Gotti and Team Roc-- the philanthropic arm of Jay-Z's entertainment company, Roc Nation -- were able to get legal representation for the inmates to be able to sue, Yo Gotti's publicist Didier Morais told CNN. 
There have been at least five prisoner deaths in the state since late December-- four of which were during violent disturbances, officials said earlier this month. 
And it's not the first time. In August 2018, Mississippi Department of Corrections CommissionerPelicia E. Hall asked the FBI to help investigate the deaths of 15 inmates, which all took place within a month. 

The new lawsuit called the recent deaths a "culmination of years of severe understaffing and neglect."
"As Mississippi has incarcerated increasing numbers of people, it has dramatically reduced its funding of prisons," the lawsuit says, adding that the underfunding forces inmates to "live in squalor, endangering their physical and mental health."

Rappers Jay-Z and Yo Gotti helped more than two dozen Mississippi inmates file a lawsuit claiming people are dying because the state "has failed to fund its prisons."

Yo Gotti and Team Roc-- the philanthropic arm of Jay-Z's entertainment company, Roc Nation -- were able to get legal representation for the inmates to be able to sue, Yo Gotti's publicist Didier Morais told CNN. 

There have been at least five prisoner deaths in the state since late December-- four of which were during violent disturbances, officials said earlier this month. 

And it's not the first time. In August 2018, Mississippi Department of Corrections CommissionerPelicia E. Hall asked the FBI to help investigate the deaths of 15 inmates, which all took place within a month. 


The new lawsuit called the recent deaths a "culmination of years of severe understaffing and neglect."

"As Mississippi has incarcerated increasing numbers of people, it has dramatically reduced its funding of prisons," the lawsuit says, adding that the underfunding forces inmates to "live in squalor, endangering their physical and mental health."