JAY-Z Believes ‘The Criminal Justice System Stalks Black People Like Meek Mill’

American rapper Meek Mill’s recent sentencing to two to four years in prison for a parole violation has been deemed disproportionately harsh by many—including the FBI, which is reportedly investigating charges of bias on the part of the Pennsylvania judge who handed down the sentence. Now JAY-Z, who owns the Roc Nation record label to which Meek Mill is currently signed, has joined the protest against the sentence with an op-ed in today’s New York Times.
Titled “The Criminal Justice System Stalks Black People Like Meek Mill,” the essay is a condemnation of the ways the American criminal justice system—and, in particular, the probation system—“entraps and harasses” black people. “For about a decade, [Meek Mill has] been stalked by a system that considers the slightest infraction a justification for locking him back inside,” JAY-Z writes, citing the judge’s overruling of recommendations from both the prosecutor and Meek Mill’s probation officer and the very minor arrests—one for popping a wheelie on a motorcycle, and another for an altercation at an airport—that were used to justify putting him in prison for several years. (The charges for both arrests were later dropped or dismissed.)“The specifics of Meek’s case inspired me to write this. But it’s time we highlight the random ways people trapped in the criminal justice system are punished every day,” he continues, citing the statistics that one-third of the 4.65 million Americans currently on some form of parole or probation are black, and that black people are much more likely to go to prison for parole violations than white people. “Probation is a trap and we must fight for Meek and everyone else unjustly sent to prison,” he concludes, recommending that readers go to the Color Of Change website to sign a petition demanding that Judge Genece Brinkley recuse herself from the case.
Meek Mill is currently scheduled to appear at a bail hearing in front of that same judge at Philadelphia’s Center for Criminal Justice at 9 a.m. on November 27, as reports claim. Earlier this week, supporters held a rally in front of the Criminal Justice Center, and Meek Mill’s lawyers filed a motion to recuse Brinkley from the appeals case.Photo Credit: Getty

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