Connect with us

Entertainment

Sheff G Released From Prison After He Posted $10 Million Bond & $1.5 Million Cash Bail

Published

on

Follow Dreddsworld on Google News

Sheff G Released From Prison After He Posted A $10 Million Bond & $1.5 Million Cash Bail

Sheff G Released From Prison After He Posted A $10 Million Bond & $1.5 Million Cash Bail

Sheff G recently took to Instagram to share with his fans that he had been released from jail on bond, following a gun possession case and an indictment against him, Sleepy Hallow, and many others on gang allegations.

“10 MILL BOND , 1.5 MILL CASH BAIL WAS THE TICKET BAIL PAID SAME DAY ARE YOU DUMB, SHEFF G BACK NEW YORK. WE FUCKING LITTTTT THEY COUNTED ME OUT!!” he wrote in the caption.

“THEY THOUGHT I WAS DONE , PEACE AND LOVE TO YALL LOL. ( WINNERSCIRCLE IM W THE STARS BABY. YOU CAN COME AND EAT W US YOU AINT GOTTA STARVEE BABYYYYYYY #FREETHEGUYZ #BAILOUTBOYZZZZZ,” the Flatbush drill rapped added.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Godfather… (@sheff_g)

Sheff G also posted some proof of all this with some screenshots that attested to his $10 million bond and $1.5 million cash bail, posted the same day. In addition, this post also included some videos of his return, which see him in very good spirits all things considered.

Michael Williams, popularly known as Sheff G, is one of the 32 alleged gang members charged in a series of shooting in Brooklyn that left one dead and dozens injured.

Last year, Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez alleged that Sheff G used earnings from his music career to “help facilitate further gang activity,” bankroll shootings against rival gangs, and encouraged gang members to commit violent crimes.

According to the 140-count indictment, the 32 male and female suspects are members of the 8 Trey Crips and its affiliate, the 9 Ways gang, and are reportedly linked to 12 shootings, including a mass shooting in Brooklyn where one was murdered, and five others were injured.

“They’re dangerous people, and it’s a small number of them. They’re repeated recidivists that as soon as you let them out, they’re back on our streets wreaking havoc,” NYC Mayor Eric Adams said. “We are not going to surrender our streets to violence.”

Trending