New York Post

Mercy for slay rapper

Gov clemency over ’93 rob & kill

- By JORGE FITZ-GIBBON With Wires

A former rising-star rapper who signed with Sean “Diddy” Combs — then got sentenced to life for a cold-case Manhattan murder — is one of 16 convicts who received clemency from Gov. Hochul Friday.

Travell “G Dep” Coleman, 49, had been serving 15 years to life behind bars for the 1993 shooting death of a robbery victim in East Harlem — a slaying that remained unsolved till 2010, when he turned himself in to cops at the 25th Precinct station house.

Commuted

The rapper’s lawyer told reporters after Coleman’s surrender that his client had been wracked with guilt since pulling off the fatal armed robbery as a teenager.

Hochul on Friday commuted Coleman’s sentence as part of her office’s traditiona­l end-of-year

clemency list. She also commuted three other convicts’ sentences and issued 12 pardons, eight involving drug cases.

A pardon wipes a conviction clean, while a commutatio­n reduces a prison sentence.

In Coleman’s case, that means his sentence of 15 years to life was retwo duced by years to

13 to life, making him eligible for early parole in 2025.

Coleman was an up-and-coming New York City hip-hopsigned per who with Combs’ Bad Boy label in 1999 and scored with tracks such as “Special Delivery” and

“Let’s Get It” before stumbling into drugs and crime.

He had more than 25 busts for drugs, burglary and larceny. He confessed to cops that he was riding a bike when he rolled up on victim John Henkel at Park Avenue and East 114th Street on Oct. 19, 1993, to rob him. The two men got into a scuffle, and Coleman said he pulled out a .40-caliand ber gun shot the victim three times in the chest, and then tossed the murder weapon into the East River.

State officials said Coleman earned an associate’s degree and worked on violence prevention and sobriety

counseling programs behind bars, as well as other rehabilita­tion programs.

Henkel’s brother, Robert Henkel, declined to comment when reached by The Post Sunday.

But in an interview with The Post last year, he called Coleman’s bid for clemency “a farce” and blasted Bragg’s office for trying to get the killer out of prison early.

‘Let him rot’

“It’s one thing to seek [clemency] for drug crimes, but not murder,” Henkel said last December. “Let [Coleman] rot in jail. Let him do his 15 years, and then he can try to get out on parole.”

Hochul said in a statement, “Through the clemency process, it is my solemn duty as governor to recognize the efforts individual­s have made to improve their lives and show that redemption is possible.”

 ?? ?? ‘REDEMPTION’: Gov. Hochul shortened by two years the sentence of Travell Coleman (above), whose guilt led him to turn himself in for a murder.
‘REDEMPTION’: Gov. Hochul shortened by two years the sentence of Travell Coleman (above), whose guilt led him to turn himself in for a murder.
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