Prosecutors on Thursday requested that a judge set bail for Marion
'Suge' Knight at $25 million in his murder case and say the former rap
music mogul has extorted millions from rappers in recent years.
The motion filed by Deputy District Attorney Cynthia Barnes cites 31
incidents in which Knight is accused of threatening others or using
violence since 2004, including threats he made about the upcoming film
Straight Outta Compton.
The motion also says Knight has been involved in money-laundering and
extortion schemes targeting up-and-coming as well as established rappers
in recent years.
Knight and an associate have been involved in an extortion scheme that
has netted more than $10 million, an affidavit filed by a sheriff's
detective says. 'Apparently when a new artist or rapper comes to either
Los Angeles or Las Vegas, he is required to pay a 'tax' to defendant
Knight,' Barnes' motion states.
The Death Row Records co-founder is scheduled to appear in a Los Angeles
courtroom on Friday morning for a hearing regarding his bail.
He is being held without bail on murder, attempted murder and
hit-and-run charges filed after he struck striking two men, killing one
of them, with his truck during a fight in a Compton, California, parking
lot in late January.
Knight, 49, has pleaded not guilty.
A phone message for Knight's attorney, Matthew Fletcher, was not immediately returned.
If Knight attempts to post bail, Barnes has requested that he prove the money has not come from illegal activities.
If Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Ronald Coen grants Knight bail, he
would either have to post the entire amount in cash or pay a bond
company eight percent of the bail amount and they would put up the whole
amount, Los Angeles criminal defense attorney Lou Shapiro said.
The bond company would keep Knight's money - $2 million if Knight's bail is set at $25 million - as its fee, Shapiro said.
Among the allegations of threats included in the motion is a summary of a
heavily-redacted police report taken last year from someone who claims
Knight threatened them over 'Straight Outta Compton,' a film about the
rise of the gangster rap group NWA.
'Knight was angry that he was not compensated for his likeness in the
movie,' Barnes' motion states. It adds that Knight warned the
unidentified victim that he was prepared to attack over the film and
would target former NWA members Dr. Dre and Ice Cube.
Knight's 1994 conviction on a federal firearms charge and a 1995
conviction on two counts of assault with a firearm that led to a lengthy
prison sentence are also cited in the motion to support.
'Since his release from prison custody, defendant Knight has continued
his repugnant life of crime,' the motion states before listing alleged
crimes that include battery, criminal threats, extortion and assault.
According to an affidavit from a sheriff's investigator, Knight is part
of an extortion scheme of rappers and professional athletes that is
jointly run by the Crips and Bloods street gangs. Knight is a member of
the Bloods gang, according to the affidavit signed by Sheriff's Sgt.
Richard Biddle.
The manager of an unidentified 'well-known' rapper told detectives that
Knight and a Crips gang leader wanted $30,000 from the performer every
time he came to Los Angeles, Biddle wrote.
Biddle stated detectives began looking into the extortion scheme after
Knight was shot six times last year at a West Hollywood, California,
nightclub on the weekend of the MTV Video Music Awards.
Knight has complained that he is suffering from complications from his
wounds, and he told a judge at a hearing earlier this month that he is
blind in one eye and has limited vision in his other eye.
He has been taken by ambulance from a courthouse three times since he
was charged with murder. Knight is charged with killing Terry Carter,
55, while fleeing a fight with another man in the parking lot of a
Compton, California, burger stand.

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