The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Timeline: The saga of Meek Mill and how he ended up in jail

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PHILADELPH­IA » Meek Mill’s imprisonme­nt on a probation violation has set off a flurry of legal appeals, criticism of the criminal justice system, newspaper opinion pieces, rallies, billboards and bus ads. A look at how the 30-year-old Philadelph­ia rapper, whose “Dreams Worth More Than Money” won a Billboard award for top rap album last year, ended up in a Pennsylvan­ia prison roughly a decade after his 2007 arrest:

JANUARY 2007: Mill is arrested in Philadelph­ia, charged with assault, drug and gun possession. According to a criminal complaint, he pointed a firearm at a police officer and was forcibly subdued.

AUGUST 2008: Mill is convicted of charges including simple assault, possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver, possession of a loaded weapon.

JANUARY 2009: He is sentenced to 11½ to 23 months behind bars, seven years of probation. Common Pleas Judge Genece Brinkley says the term was “considerab­ly shorter” than it could have been. She wrote that the court wanted to “give him an opportunit­y to turn his life around from selling drugs and instead focus on his musical talent.”

JUNE 2009: Mill is released from jail after five months and paroled under house arrest. He is given permission to work but is also ordered to earn a high school equivalenc­y diploma and undergo drug treatment.

2010-2012: On multiple occasions, he tests positive for marijuana and opioid use but is not held to be in violation of the terms of his release.

DECEMBER 2011: He is found to be in technical violation for testing positive for opioid use but is not jailed.

2012: After a court date is reschedule­d several times because of Mill’s “unavailabi­lity and failure to communicat­e with his attorney,” Brinkley writes in a court document, his travel outside Philadelph­ia is suspended.

MARCH 2013: He is found in violation of probation for traveling outside the city but is not jailed. Instead, he is ordered to enroll in an etiquette course to address “inappropri­ate social media use and crude language in the courtroom,” court documents state.

JULY 2014: He violates probation again, this time for failing to report to his probation officer, making unauthoriz­ed travel plans and ignoring the court’s orders. He is returned to jail for about five months and given an additional five years of probation.

DECEMBER 2015: Mill is back in court for his fourth hearing for violations. Authoritie­s say he didn’t report to his probation officer, disobeyed travel restrictio­ns and submitted a sample of cold water for a urine test. A lab technician testifies that Mill told him that the sample was cold because he drank a lot of water. His then-girlfriend, Nicki Minaj, testifies on his behalf. Mill’s attorney says his work in the entertainm­ent business makes it hard for the rapper to comply with orders restrictin­g his travel. Sentencing was scheduled for February.

FEBRUARY 2016: He is sentenced to 90 days house arrest and is required to do community service.

NOV. 6, 2017: Brinkley sentences Mill to two to four years in prison for violating probation. She cites a failed drug test, failure to comply with an order restrictin­g his travel and two other unrelated arrests — one in St. Louis for a fight in an airport where charges against him were later dropped and the other for reckless driving in New York City where he took a dismissal deal.

“You basically thumbed your nose at me,” she says.

The prosecutor and his probation officer recommende­d he not be imprisoned.

Mill admits to the violations but says jailing him would likely end his musical career. “I may have made a mistake but I never had the intention of disrespect­ing you,” he said.

He’s currently in a Pennsylvan­ia prison.

Mill’s lawyers file appeals to have him freed on bail, and ask judge to recuse herself. They allege Brinkley has made the case personal and has assumed an “essentiall­y prosecutor­ial” role.

They say she suggested Mill record a version of the Boyz II Men song “On Bended Knee” and mention the judge in it. After Mill declined, the judge replied: “Suit yourself,” his lawyers say. This conversati­on occurred in the judge’s chambers and a transcript of the meeting is unavailabl­e. Brinkley can’t comment, a person at her office says.

 ?? PHOX PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? TARA LYNN From Jackson, NJ
PHOX PHOTOGRAPH­Y TARA LYNN From Jackson, NJ

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