6ix9ine pleaded guilty to the charges accused of him.
6ix9ine was slammed with a civil action in December for his role in an armed robbery in 2018. Seketha Wonzer and Kevin Dozier, the plaintiffs, claim that the 25-year-old rapper was present when his Trey Nine Bloods comrades ambushed them in Manhattan on April 3, 2018.
The victims, who are also publicists, allege that they were at the studio when five armed men arrived in an SUV and ordered them to lie down before seizing their belongings.
The plaintiffs claim they were accosted since 6ix9ine and his gang members mistook them for being associated with J. Prince’s Rap-A-Lot Records. As part of his plea agreement with authorities during his conspiracy trial, 6ix9ine pled guilty to this offence and other crimes.
6ix9ine claimed in a written affidavit to the court handling the case that he is “struggling to make ends meet.”
“Right now, I am struggling to make ends meet. I do not know if I will ever command the kind of advances I was paid before my arrest, and my career stalled,” 6ix9ine said.
The Brooklyn rapper claims that his record agreement with TenThousand Projects, as well as a merchandising arrangement, terminated last month. “I did receive large advances under the recording artist and merchandising agreements prior to my arrest,” he states in the documents. “However, I do not receive any royalties under those agreements either since my royalty accounts remain unrecouped.”
6ix9ine says that any negative decision might lead to his bankruptcy. “It will surely bankrupt me in a way from which I will never recover to the permanent detriment and hardship of the family members who rely upon me,” he stated.
View this post on Instagram