Meek Mill is speaking out in his first interview since going to prison, and Genece Brinkley, the judge that sentenced him, is described by colleagues in less than desirable terms.
Despite the heightened media attention that’s been placed on him since his sentence began, Mill spoke to Rolling Stone Magazine and explained why he’s limited the number of people that can visit him since he began his inceration in November.
“I won’t let them come,” he says of his family, a huge and intensely close tribe in Philadelphia, about 15 miles east of these walls. “If they see me like this – fucked-up beard, hair all ganked – then it’s like I’m really in here. Which I’m not.”
To rage or steep in sadness would be “letting [that woman] win,”
As part of the same investigative piece, Rolling Stone interviewed colleagues of Brinkley who described the Judge as a sadist that issues excessive punishments on defendants and detail the multiple lawsuits involving Brinkley.
For 15 years, per the evidence I’ve obtained, she’s committed acts unbefitting her office; a full accounting can be found below. Perhaps worse, though, say lawyers who have sat before her in court, is her treatment of defendants. “She’s a sadist,” says a Philadelphia attorney who asked that I not name him for his clients’ sake. “She puts long-tail probations on young black men, then jerks them back to jail for small infractions.”
Meek remains incarcerated in Philadelphia for violating parole in a dirt bike incident. Judge Genece Brinkley remains under FBI investigation.
