The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Teen held after threats to sheriff over rapper’s arrest

18-year-old faces 23 charges of making terroristi­c threats.

- By Shaddi Abusaid shaddi.abusaid@ajc.com

An 18-year-old is behind bars after officials said he threatened Fulton County Sheriff Patrick Labat and his wife over a sprawling gang indictment charging more than two dozen people, including rapper Young Thug.

Quartavius Mender was booked into the Fulton jail last week on 23 charges of making terroristi­c threats, records show.

Warrants allege the teenager threatened on social media to kill Labat, his wife Jacki and the Atlanta Public Schools police chief. The threats were made following the high-profile arrests of several alleged “Young Slime Life” gang members, a spokeswoma­n for the sheriff said. Among those charged last month are popular Atlanta rappers Young Thug and Gunna.

Authoritie­s said Mender threatened to kill the Labats on their respective Instagram pages unless Young Thug, the alleged leader of YSL, was released from jail.

“#freethug or Imma sh00t u and your wife,” the teen wrote, according to his arrest warrants. Mender allegedly wrote on the sheriff ’s page a second time hours later, saying, “Imma assassinat­e you.”

He also is accused of announcing plans to kill the sheriff on the Georgia State Patrol’s recruiting page, the Gwinnett County Sheriff’s Office account and the Fulton Clerk of Court’s Instagram page, warrants allege.

Among the 28 people charged in the racketeeri­ng

indictment is a defendant named Tenquarius Mender. It wasn’t immediatel­y clear Friday morning if he and the teen accused of making the threats are related.

“We take these kinds of brazen threats seriously,” Labat said in a statement. “Social media cyberbully­ing and hiding behind a keyboard will not protect someone from criminal prosecutio­n.”

Mender is being held without bond.

Young Thug, whose real name is Jeffery Williams, was denied bond Thursday after a Fulton County judge expressed “significan­t concerns” about letting him out.

Prosecutor­s said they plan to offer plea deals to some of the defendants in exchange for testimony, but that some of their witnesses already are being threatened.

“We have evidence and informatio­n of even more threats,” said prosecutor Don Geary, who told the judge one defendant made threats using a contraband cellphone inside the jail. “Our witnesses in this case are being threatened with violence, serious violence and death.”

Geary said he didn’t think

Williams had killed anyone personally, but that “he probably has others do it for him.”

Williams is charged with racketeeri­ng and participat­ing in gang activity, but prosecutor­s allege the Grammy winner had a hand in more

serious crimes, including murder. His attorneys strongly deny the allegation­s and presented witnesses Thursday who testified about the star’s charitable contributi­ons in the southwest Atlanta community and beyond.

Geary told Judge Ural Glanville that granting bond in the case likely would lead to some of the state’s witnesses being threatened or worse. Some potential witnesses already have expressed fears about retaliatio­n, the prosecutor said.

“If they crossed him, he would kill them and their family,” Geary said in court. “They were very clear about that.”

Before denying bond to Williams, the judge read a text message the rapper allegedly sent to fellow YSL members in a 2015 group chat: “Anybody goes into a courtroom and tells the God honest truth they’ll be (expletive) killed.”

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER/STEVE.SCHAEFER@AJC.COM ?? Sheriff Patrick Labat talks at a press conference on May 10. Labat and his wife received death threats over the arrest of Young Thug.
STEVE SCHAEFER/STEVE.SCHAEFER@AJC.COM Sheriff Patrick Labat talks at a press conference on May 10. Labat and his wife received death threats over the arrest of Young Thug.

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