Miami Herald

Days before retrial, YNW Melly faces a new charge. Defense says it’s a distractio­n

- BY GRETHEL AGUILA gaguila@miamiheral­d.com Grethel Aguila: @GrethelAgu­ila

YNW Melly’s doublemurd­er trial is set to begin next week, but the rapper is now facing a new charge.

Melly appeared in court on Wednesday and was formally charged with witness tampering. The allegation came just days after co-defendant Cortlen Henry, who was out on bond pending his trial, was arrested in MiamiDade County on witnesstam­pering charges. Melly has been at Broward County’s main jail since he turned himself in to authoritie­s in February 2019.

Details related to the witness-tampering charge hadn’t been filed in court as of Wednesday morning.

However, the Broward Sheriff’s Office alleges that Henry and unnamed “others” stopped a potential witness from testifying in Melly’s trial by “knowingly [engaging] in misleading conduct” from April through July.

“This is a transparen­t and desperate attempt by the State Attorney’s office to distract the public for the deposition of an Assistant State Attorney who accused this case’s lead detective and lead prosecutor of felonies by falsifying and covering up evidence damaging to the state’s case,” the rapper’s defense attorneys said in a statement to the Miami Herald.

In the past week, the rapper’s case has heated up with defense attorneys filing slews of court documents and accusing Miramar Police Detective Mark Moretti of wrongdoing and lead prosecutor Kristine Bradley of a Brady violation, or concealing informatio­n favorable to the defense, for allegedly not divulging details about the incident involving Moretti.

Under Florida law, prosecutor­s are required to disclose any informatio­n that might be favorable to the defense. The discovery of Brady violations has led to overturned conviction­s in some cases.

On Friday, Michelle

Boutros, a Broward prosecutor of 20 years assigned to the Public Corruption Unit, recounted the events of the October 2022 incident with Moretti and accused him of unethical behavior.

Defense attorneys filed the transcript­s of Boutros’ interview on Monday to support their efforts to dismiss the case.

In 2022, Boutros was contacted for a possible tampering investigat­ion into Jamie King, Melly’s mother.

That’s why she was present when Moretti questioned King. King was accused of tampering with two witnesses: Mariah Hamilton, Melly’s ex-girlfriend, and Felicia Holmes, Hamilton’s mother.

Holmes ultimately took the stand in the first trial and told defense attorney Stuart Adelstein that she felt threatened by Bradley, the prosecutor.

“There is now sworn testimony from a court officer that Det. Moretti illegally seized evidence, falsified a report, and solicited an officer to lie,” Melly’s defense team said in a statement. “Further, there is testimony that Kristine Bradley knowingly violated law by covering up this illegal seizure, and has had her bar license threatened by her superior, Broward State Attorney Harold Pryor.”

The defense notified Pryor, Deputy Chief Assistant State Attorney Regina Faulk and Assistant State Attorney Christophe­r Killoran, Boutros’ boss, to appear in court for a hearing on Friday. But the top officials at the State Attorney’s Office requested on Tuesday that Broward Circuit Court Judge John Murphy quash the subpoenas, which required them to appear, on the grounds that they weren’t properly served.

They also asked Murphy to grant a protective order as the defense planned to question them about “privileged work product.”

Melly, 24, whose real name is Jamell Demons, is accused of gunning down his childhood friends Anthony Williams and Christophe­r Thomas

Jr. in a drive-by after spending the night of

Oct. 26, 2018, at a Fort Lauderdale recording studio. Williams and Thomas, both aspiring rappers with the YNW collective, were known as YNW Sakchaser and

YNW Juvy.

Melly is among the first defendants to go to trial after Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a law to lower the threshold for a death sentence to an 8-4 jury vote from the previous requiremen­t for a unanimous vote.

DEFENSE ATTORNEYS HAVE ACCUSED A MIRAMAR POLICE DETECTIVE OF WRONGDOING AND A PROSECUTOR OF CONCEALING INFORMATIO­N FAVORABLE TO THE DEFENSE.

 ?? AMY BETH BENNETT South Florida Sun Sentinel ?? Jamell Demons, better known as rapper YNW Melly, enters the courtroom for closing arguments in his trial at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale on July 20. Demons, 22, is accused of killing two fellow rappers. He will be retried.
AMY BETH BENNETT South Florida Sun Sentinel Jamell Demons, better known as rapper YNW Melly, enters the courtroom for closing arguments in his trial at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale on July 20. Demons, 22, is accused of killing two fellow rappers. He will be retried.

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