Chattanooga Times Free Press

Meek Mill’s lawyers seek judge’s removal, citing probe by FBI

- BY ANTHONY IZAGUIRRE

PHILADELPH­IA — Rapper Meek Mill’s lawyers renewed their call for a judge who sentenced him to step aside on Monday, saying “there was an FBI investigat­ion” into her conduct and his gun and drug case.

The imprisoned musician’s legal team wrote in a court filing that he and his representa­tives were aware of the investigat­ion into Judge Genece Brinkley’s conduct since 2016. They argued that the existence of a probe raises questions about the judge’s ability to fairly preside over the case.

“How could she sit in judgment? She can’t,” said defense attorney Joe Tacopina, who declined to answer questions about the defense team’s new claim.

An FBI spokeswoma­n said the agency does not confirm or deny investigat­ions. The judge had no comment.

Mill’s lawyers filed the motion days after the judge denied a request to free him in a court opinion in which she wrote he is “a danger to the community.”

The judge sentenced Mill last month to two to four years in prison for violating probation on a roughly decade-old gun and drug case. The ruling came after a prosecutor and a probation officer recommende­d that Mill, who’s 30 years old, not be jailed.

The judge said she gave Mill multiple chances to clean up his act but he repeatedly tested positive for drugs, failed to heed travel restrictio­ns and was rearrested twice.

“You basically thumbed your nose at me,” she told him during sentencing.

Mill’s imprisonme­nt was met with resistance from celebritie­s, activists, newspaper opinion pieces, billboards and bus ads and a flurry of legal filings that asked for Mill to be freed and for the judge to recuse herself.

The appeals charge that the judge has made the case personal and has wrongly assumed an “essentiall­y prosecutor­ial” role.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Meek Mill arrives Nov. 6 at a criminal justice center in Philadelph­ia. A Philadelph­ia judge has sentenced the rapper to two to four years for violating probation.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Meek Mill arrives Nov. 6 at a criminal justice center in Philadelph­ia. A Philadelph­ia judge has sentenced the rapper to two to four years for violating probation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States