Tekashi 6ix9ine getting death threats after arrest on racketeering charges, lawyer says

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Friday, November 23, 2018
Tekashi69 transferred to new facility after 'death threats,' lawyer says
Troubled rapper Tekashi69 has been transferred from the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn for safety concerns.

NEW YORK -- The defense attorney for rapper Tekashi 6ix9ine, who faces federal racketeering and firearms charges, says his client is getting death threats and has been transferred to a new facility.

The rapper, whose legal name is Daniel Hernandez, was transferred from the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn for safety concerns. At MDC Brooklyn, he was placed in the general population.

The artist is among five people indicted this week on charges that he directed or participated in violent acts as part of a deadly gang known as the 9 Trey Bloods.

The indictment alleges that the violent episodes involving 6ix9ine included the July shooting of a bystander in Brooklyn and the gunpoint robbery of one of the gang's rivals last spring.

6ix9ine was held without bail after an initial appearance before a Manhattan federal magistrate judge Monday.

On Wednesday, defense attorney Lance Lazzaro said in a statement that his client was "completely innocent of all charges."

"An entertainer who portrays a 'gangster image' to promote his music does not make him a member of an enterprise," Lazzaro said.

"Mr. Hernandez became a victim of this enterprise and later took steps by firing employees and publicly denounced this enterprise through a morning show. Threats were then made against his life which resulted in this case being brought immediately," he added.

At Monday's hearing, Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Longyear said the rapper did not renounce his membership in the gang on the radio show last week.

He said 6ix9ine would have been arrested this week anyway, but the timetable was speeded up when authorities learned that he planned to go to a Connecticut casino where it would be harder to protect him from the threats.

Longyear said the threats were overheard on phone calls intercepted Saturday by investigators, including one in which an individual was heard saying that gang members wanted to "super violate him."

The prosecutor noted that violence seemed to surround the entertainer. He said 10 shots were fired into a Beverly Hills, California, home where he was filming a music video a week ago.

WABC-TV and the Associated Press contributed to this report.