Williams’ family was able to scrape together the $15,000 bail set by the court and then used the teens’ record deal to secure the bond with Judelson, sources said. The reputed teen gang member and budding rap star who allegedly accidentally shot an NYPD officer is using cash from a recent record deal to try to get himself out of jail, law-enforcement sources told The Post on Friday.Ĭamrin Williams, 16, recently inked a deal with Interscope Records, and his advance, worth several hundred thousand dollars, was used to secure a $200,000 bond from celebrity bondsman Ira Judelson, sources said. One dead, multiple people injured in California church shootingīuffalo shooting suspect allegedly wrote Waukesha parade victim’s name on gun
![rapper noreaga died rapper noreaga died](https://theneptunes.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/Noreaga.jpg)
Gun shop owner who sold firearm to Buffalo shooting suspect ‘feels terrible’ Let's look beyond the parameters that we already know and just really try to expand the dimensions of telling our stories.2 people dead, 3 injured in shooting at busy Houston flea market "We have been the creators of culture since we hit this land. "Our culture is so rich - not just in hip-hop but ," Ossé said. In an interview with NPR Music earlier this year, Ossé explained why he felt it was necessary to champion Lighty's work ethic and accomplishments.
![rapper noreaga died rapper noreaga died](https://www.rapmusicguide.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/OG-Style.jpg)
Rapper noreaga died series#
"For Reggie to bring back the legacy of my brother Chris through the Mogul series was monumental for me and the culture of hip-hop," Chris's brother Dave Lighty tells NPR.
Rapper noreaga died serial#
Produced in conjunction with Gimlet Media, the series about the life and death of the notable hip-hop industry executive Chris Lighty became hip-hop's first serial narrative podcast when it debuted on Spotify. Before his passing, Ossé produced and hosted groundbreaking podcast Mogul: The Life & Death of Chris Lighty earlier this year. Ossé co-founded the Loud Speakers Network, a family of podcasts, in 2013. The Record 'Mogul': Even In Death, Chris Lighty Takes Hip-Hop To Another Level Cole telling the story of how he wanted to sign Kendrick Lamar, listeners knew they would always get something special out of a Combat Jack interview. From Scarface playing guitar live and proclaiming his love for Pink Floyd to Prodigy detailing his own childhood kidnapping to J. Ossé was able to get gems out of otherwise reserved or reclusive rappers by employing a type of interview style many emulate today. The show scored some of the rarest and rawest hip-hop interviews of an era when rap's center of gravity started its move toward the Internet. The Combat Jack Show started on a lark - with a crazy crew of sidemen including Dallas Penn, Premium Pete, an occasional Just Blaze, DJ Benhameen and producer A-King - on its way to becoming a pioneering hip-hop podcast. He would go on to work for MTV Networks before launching his own Internet radio show titled The Combat Jack Show in 2010. In 2009, Ossé switched from entertainment law to entertainment journalism. Before Combat Jack, he worked as music attorney, representing the likes of Jay-Z and Capone-N-Noreaga during the fledgling stages of their careers. In October of this year, Ossé shared that he had been diagnosed with an aggressive form of colon cancer with his fans online. Chris Morrow, Ossé's friend and his co-founder of Loud Speaker Networks, confirmed his death, telling NPR that he died this morning at Mount Sinai Beth Israel Hospital in New York. Reggie Ossé, better known to the hip-hop world as podcast host Combat Jack, has passed away from colon cancer. The hip-hop personality has passed away at the age of 53. Reggie "Combat Jack" Ossé attends the Spotify Mogul launch party in May 2017.