Gunna hit headlines after he pled guilty to racketeering charges, and was released from jail after entering a plea deal in regard to the infamous YSL case with fellow rapper Young Thug and his associates.
The rapper’s actions not only raised eyebrows of netizens who were closely following the news of the case but as well as Gunna’s fellow rappers and other people in the hip-hop community.
According to reports, Lil Durk, Lil Baby, and Meek Mill have all made their sentiments known: they want nothing to do with Gunna.
Lil Durk just released a teaser of upcoming music. It’s a video of himself vibing to a short snippet of the song.
“What happened to Virgil he probably gon’ tell,” Lil Durk rapped. According to HipHopDX, he might be referencing the song “What Happened to Virgil,” a song Lil Durk did with Gunna just last year.
The rest of the song goes: “I let him go because Timo ain’t selling / Thank 7 and Booka, I’m bragging on Melvin / When lil boo and them mad, it ain’t nothing you can tell them / I can tell you what I did for the streets / You got the paperwork, did it and reached / I got on Clubhouse and got in the beef.”
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Unfollowed
Aside from Lil Durk’s alleged diss track, TMZ reported that Lil Baby and Meek Mill both unfollowed Gunna on Instagram over the weekend.
Lil Baby, like Lil Durk, is a frequent collaborator of Gunna, and they both hail from Atlanta.
They worked on a mixtape and have featured on each other’s songs numerous times before.
Perhaps Gunna allegedly throwing Young Thug under the bus has caused this rift between the two because an unfollow usually equates to friendship over.
Reports note that Gunna, along with Young Thug and others, were accused of street gang criminal activity, which includes drug possession, armed robbery attempted murder, and aggravated assault.
Gunna made several attempts of posting bail but was denied-until he accepted the Alford plea, which entails him pleading guilty while maintaining innocence.
“My focus of YSL was entertainment – rap artists who wrote and performed music that exaggerated and ‘glorified’ urban life in the Black community,” he said.
While I have agreed to always be truthful, I want to make it perfectly clear that I have NOT made any statements, have NOT been interviewed, have NOT cooperated, have NOT agreed to testify or be a witness for or against any party in the case and have absolutely NO intention of being involved in the trial process in any way.”
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